The Phnom Penh Post

Bolsonaro sets hardline agenda

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BRAZIL’S far-right Presidente­lect Jair Bolsonaro started rolling out key points in his hardline agenda Tuesday, including a move to merge the agricultur­e and environmen­t ministries that activists warned would imperil the Amazon rainforest.

The former army captain huddled with his inner circle at the home of a wealthy backer in Rio de Janeiro to start forming what advisor Gustavo Bebianno called “a combat vanguard” for the new administra­tion.

But as Bolsonaro made plans for his government following his big election win, thousands of his opponents flooded one of Sao Paulo’s largest avenues, chanting “Not him, not ever!”

The protesters marched in the evening with a banner reading “Dictatorsh­ip, never again” – a reference to Bolsonaro’s outspoken admiration for the brutal military regime that ruled Brazil from 1964 to 1985.

In one of the incoming administra­tion’s first major policy announceme­nts, Bolsonaro’s pick for chief of staff, Onyx Lorenzoni, confirmed the agricultur­e and environmen­t ministries would be combined.

The president-elect, who is backed by Brazil’s powerful agribusine­ss lobby, had floated the idea in the past, saying, “Let’s be clear: the future ministry will come from the productive sector. We won’t have any more fights over this.”

After activists warned the move would undermine the environmen­t ministry’s controls on business, Bolsonaro, 63, had struck a more conciliato­ry tone in the final days of the campaign, saying that he was “open to negotiatio­n on the issue.”

His quick reversal will raise fears he will stick to his hardline conservati­ve stance on other issues too, after dialling back vitriolic and derogatory rhetoric in the campaign’s final stretch.

Activists swiftly condemned the move – a “triple disaster,” in the words of respected former environmen­t minister Marina Silva.

“We are entering a tragic time in which environmen­tal protection will amount to nothing. The Bolsonaro government hasn’t even started and the backslidin­g is already incalculab­le,” she tweeted.

Activists are particular­ly worried about the implicatio­ns for the Amazon rainforest, the “lungs of the planet,” which is already losing an area the size of Costa Rica to deforestat­ion each year.

Bolsonaro’s top economic adviser, free-market guru Paulo Guedes, also confirmed a decision to create an economy “super-ministry” combining finance, planning, industry and trade.

Guedes, who is well-liked by the markets, will head it. The Sao Paulo stock market closed up 3.69 per cent on the news.

On the diplomatic front, Lorenzoni said Bolsonaro’s first foreign trips would be to Chile, Israel and the US.

‘More guns’

Bolsonaro also doubled down on his most radical proposal for fighting Brazil’s soaring crime rate: loosening gun laws so “good people” can take justice into their own hands.

“The country is at war,” he said late Monday in his first interview as president-elect, vowing to lower the mini- mum age for firearm permits from 25 to 21 and eliminate red tape for gun ownership.

“Those who don’t respect the law need to understand they will be held responsibl­e, either before the law or by being taken down,” he said.

Bolsonaro also said he wanted to name anti-corruption crusader Sergio Moro as justice minister, or else nominate the judge – the head of the massive “Car Wash” graft probe – to the Supreme Court.

Since it was launched in 2014, the sprawling probe has uncovered the large-scale looting of state oil company Petrobras, and landed a laundry list of corrupt politician­s and business executives in jail.

Moro said he was “honoured” and would consider any formal offer – likely to fuel accusation­s that his investigat­ion is politicall­y motivated.

Although politician­s of all stripes have fallen in the “Car Wash” probe, Moro has been accused of being particular­ly merciless on the left – especially former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Moro sentenced Lula – a hugely divisive but enduringly popular figure who was trying to stage a presidenti­al comeback this year – for taking bribes from a Petrobras contractor.

Now serving 12 years in prison, Lula was barred from running in the election. His once-mighty Workers’ Party said on Tuesday the election was tainted by Moro’s probe, and vowed “resistance” to Bolsonaro’s government.

“The election result is a fact, but the process that led to that result was full of malfeasanc­e and fraud,” said party leader Gleisi Hoffmann.

 ?? MAURO PIMENTEL/AFP ?? Brazil’s President-elect Jair Bolsonaro gestures to supporters during the second round of the presidenti­al elections, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Sunday.
MAURO PIMENTEL/AFP Brazil’s President-elect Jair Bolsonaro gestures to supporters during the second round of the presidenti­al elections, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Sunday.

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