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Brazil’s Bolsonaro rejects link to murder case, threatens TV network’s license

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BRASILIA/RIO DE JANEIRO, (Reuters) - Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro yesterday deplored a TV network’s report linking him with a former police officer accused of assassinat­ing a Rio de Janeiro city councilwom­an and threatened to cancel the broadcaste­r’s license.

TV Globo, Brazil’s largest TV network, reported on Tuesday that just hours before the March 2018 murder, the suspect was said to have told a doorman he was going to Bolsonaro’s house, gaining access to a gated community where he met instead with another former policeman accused of murdering the left-wing politician Marielle Franco.

The case led to widespread protests by Brazilians outraged to see a black, openly gay human rights advocate gunned down. Investigat­ors arrested two former police officers, Ronnie Lessa and Elcio de Queiroz, nearly a year later and charged them with killing Franco in return for about $50,000. Their lawyers said they did not commit the crime.

Rio state prosecutor­s said later on Wednesday that the doorman had been mistaken. At a news conference, prosecutor­s said it was Lessa, who lived two doors down from Bolsonaro, who had answered the intercom and allowed Queiroz to enter.

Bolsonaro, who took office on Jan. 1, 2019, denied any connection to the case. He said he was in Brasilia the day of the murder voting in Congress, where he was then serving as a representa­tive. TV Globo’s report also said Bolsonaro was in Brasilia the day of Franco’s murder.

The president accused the media and a former ally, Rio Governor Wilson Witzel, of conspiring to attack him and his family.

“This is rotten, villainous journalism by TV Globo,” an enraged Bolsonaro said in a live video on social media, recorded at 4 a.m. in a Riyadh hotel during an official visit to Saudi Arabia.

Bolsonaro went on to discuss the timeline for renewing the license of the network, which is part of Grupo Globo, the largest media group in Brazil and includes TV, publishing, internet content and music labels.

“We’ll talk in 2022,” Bolsonaro said. “You’d better hope I’m dead by then, because the renewal process won’t be persecutio­n, but ... there won’t be any workaround­s for you or anyone else.”

The president’s office said it would not comment on Bolsonaro’s remarks about renewing Globo’s license.

In a statement, Globo expressed regret about Bolsonaro’s comments and said its aim was to inform the Brazilian public. Referring to its license renewal, it said that it had complied with its obligation­s during the past 54 years.

TV Globo said the doorman to Bolsonaro’s gated community in Rio told police that someone in the Bolsonaro residence identified as “Mr. Jair” confirmed the visitor on the day of Franco’s murder and then waved off the doorman’s concern that the car had gone to a different house.

“It looks like either the doorman lied or someone induced him to commit a false testimony,” Bolsonaro said.

He accused Witzel of leaking details from a confidenti­al investigat­ion to the press to “destroy the Bolsonaro family” before the 2022 presidenti­al elections.

Witzel denied any political interferen­ce with the investigat­ion. “I deeply regret the untimely reaction of President Jair Bolsonaro,” the governor said in a statement.

Bolsonaro’s justice minister, Sergio Moro, asked Brazil’s top public prosecutor Augusto Aras to investigat­e the doorman’s allegation, saying he might have given false testimony, either in error or as part of a wider conspiracy to implicate the president, according to the request made public by the ministry.

Aras’ office, known as the PGR, said federal prosecutor­s in Rio de Janeiro would investigat­e whether there was an obstructio­n of justice or false testimony in the informatio­n given by the doorman.

 ??  ?? Marielle Franco
Marielle Franco

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