China Daily (Hong Kong)

Supporters of Rousseff insist suspended president broke no laws

- By AGENCE FRANCEPRES­SE in Brasilia

The final witnesses in the defense of suspended Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff testified late on Saturday in her senate impeachmen­t trial, days before a vote that could permanentl­y remove her from power.

Rousseff, 68, is accused of taking illegal state loans to help bridge budget shortfalls and mask the true state of the economy during her 2014 reelection campaign.

The one-time leftist guerrilla, who was imprisoned and tortured under Brazil’s military government in the 1970s, says the charges against her are trumped up and amount to a right-wing coup.

Testifying on the third day of the impeachmen­t trial were former economy minister Nelson Barbosa and Rio State University law professor Ricardo Lodi.

Both testified that Rousseff — suspended from office in May — did not break the law or harm the economy, which is now in deep recession.

“There is no basis to say that the president is criminally responsibl­e,” Barbosa said.

He insisted that decrees that Rousseff issued at the time were fully constituti­onal.

“There is nothing remotely illegal,” Barbosa said. “You cannot act retroactiv­ely with a new interpreta­tion of the law.”

The same argument was delivered on Friday by a first batch of witnesses testifying on Rousseff ’s behalf who said that such budget maneuvers have long been common practice, and that Brazil’s economic decline was entirely unrelated.

Rousseff ’s accusers laid out their case on the trial’s opening day Thursday, arguing that she was criminally irresponsi­ble and helped run once booming Brazil into the ground.

Brazil’s economy shrank 3.8 percent in 2015 and is forecast to drop a further 3.3 percent this year, a historic recession. Inflation stands at around 9 percent and unemployme­nt at 11 percent.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Turkish army convoy drives to their base in Karkamis on the Turkish-Syrian border in the southeaste­rn Gaziantep province, Turkey, on Saturday.
REUTERS A Turkish army convoy drives to their base in Karkamis on the Turkish-Syrian border in the southeaste­rn Gaziantep province, Turkey, on Saturday.

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