Millennium Post

IMPRISONED LULA STILL ‘OUR candidate,’ says his party

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CURITIBA: Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, imprisoned since the weekend on a corruption conviction, will still be the Workers' Party candidate in Brazil's October presidenti­al election, party leaders said on Tuesday.

"He is our candidate no matter the circumstan­ces," party chief Gleisi Hoffmann said outside the police station in the southern city of Curitiba where Lula is locked up.

The leftwing ex-president, 72, handed himself into police on Saturday, a day after defying a court-ordered deadline to surrender to start serving his 12-year sentence.

He remains the comfortabl­e favourite in voter surveys heading toward the October election, though his incarcerat­ion casts doubts on whether he can legally run for office.

He should be declared ineligible in August after having his conviction upheld once by an appeals court. But he and his party are gambling that he could be released from prison before then and go on to contest the election. Many in Brazil revere the former trade union leader for lifting tens of millions out of poverty during his 2003-2010 time in office. But many others believe him emblematic of the graft that plagues Brazilian politics.

He was found guilty last year of accepting a luxury seaside apartment from a constructi­on group that picked up government public works contracts.

His lawyer, Cristiano Zanin, told reporters upon visiting him on Tuesday that Lula "is doing well, reading a lot and he is also happy for the win on Monday by the Corinthian­s" -- Lula's favorite soccer club.

The ex-leader has a relatively comfortabl­e cell to himself that includes its own bathroom and a television.

"Lula sees himself as a political prisoner. But he has confidence that the courts will soon overturn not only his prison order but also the conviction that was put on him in an unjust and illegal way," Zanin said.

Brazil's Supreme Court is currently considerin­g the laws that have put Lula behind bars while his lawyers are still pursuing appeals.

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