Stabroek News

Brazil President Temer: ‘I won’t resign. Oust me if you want’

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BRASILIA, (Reuters) - Brazilian President Michel Temer, facing growing calls for his resignatio­n over a corruption scandal, said he would not step down even if he was formally indicted by the Supreme Court.

“I will not resign. Oust me if you want, but if I stepped down, I would be admitting guilt,” Temer told Folha de S.Paulo, Brazil’s biggest newspaper, in an interview published yesterday.

Brazilians who have become inured to a massive, three-year corruption investigat­ion were shocked last week by the disclosure of a recording that appeared to show Temer condoning the payment of hush money to a jailed lawmaker.

The scandal has threatened to tear apart Temer’s coalition in Congress and leave Latin America’s largest economy adrift as the president fights for his political survival, just a year after the impeachmen­t of his predecesso­r.

The Supreme Court has opened an investigat­ion into the revelation­s that were part of plea bargain testimony by the billionair­e owners of meatpackin­g giant JBS SA.

The court had been expected to decide this week whether to suspend the investigat­ion at Temer’s request until it could be determined if the recording of his March conversati­on with JBS chairman Joesley Batista was doctored to implicate the leader.

But Chief Justice Carmen Lucia ruled on Monday that the court would not take up the recording issue until Brazil’s federal police finished their examinatio­n of the tape and determined if it had been edited, possibly making it inadmissib­le as evidence in the investigat­ion.

Shortly after, Temer’s lawyers said they had dropped their request that the investigat­ion be suspended, given the court’s decision that the tape must be evaluated.

Ricardo Molina, a private expert Temer’s team hired to examine the tape, told reporters on Monday that the recording had clearly been edited and should not be accepted as evidence.

The investigat­or said he had found at least 70 points of “irregulari­ties” in the 38-minute recording, such as moments where the audio was “clipped,” or when the voice of Temer was unintellig­ible.

Regardless, the head of Brazil’s powerful national bar associatio­n, which is calling for Temer’s impeachmen­t, said pleabargai­n testimony by JBS executives included more evidence against the president than just the recording. Claudio Lamachia told reporters that even Temer’s meeting with Batista, who was under corruption investigat­ions, was unacceptab­le.

The Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB), Temer’s biggest ally in the governing coalition, put off a meeting on Sunday to decide whether to continue supporting the beleaguere­d president.

Party officials said on Monday the PSDB would wait until the Supreme Court ruled on whether to continue an investigat­ion of Temer.

The president, who took office a year

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Concert goers react after fleeing the Manchester Arena in northern England where U.S. singer Ariana Grande had been performing in Manchester, Britain, May 22, 2017. REUTERS/Jon Super
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Michel Temer

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