Jamaica Gleaner

Brazil top court rules against Lula

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BRAZIL’S TOP court voted narrowly in the early hours on Thursday to turn down an attempt by former President Luiz Inácio da Silva to stay out of jail while he appeals a corruption conviction, a decision that will have widespread implicatio­ns in this polarised nation.

After nearly 11 hours of often heated debate, the justices of the Supreme Federal Tribunal voted 6-5 to deny Lula’s preventive habeas corpus request to stave off a 12-year jail sentence while he fights a conviction in a case that he argues was nothing more than a ploy to keep him off of October’s presidenti­al ballot.

Despite the conviction and several other corruption charges pending against him, Lula leads all preference polls for the election. The decision means he will likely be jailed soon, though probably not until at least next week, thanks to various technicali­ties.

Within minutes of the decision, Lula’s Workers’ Party, which held Brazil’s presidency from 2003 to 2016, put out a tweet that foreshadow­ed the struggles to come.

“The Brazilian people have the right to vote for Lula, the candidate of hope,” it read. “The Workers’ Party will defend this candidacy on the streets and in every court until the last consequenc­es.”

The court’s debate underscore­d how fraught the matter is at a time of high tension and angst in Brazil, which is struggling to emerge from a crippling recession and is four years into a major corruption scandal that has ensnared much of the country's elite, including Lula. "The constituti­on secures individual rights, which are fundamenta­l to democracy, but it also assures the exercise of criminal law," said Chief Justice Carmen Lucia, who cast the deciding vote after spending much of the session being criticised by colleagues. Justice Gilmar Mendes, traditiona­lly a critic of Lula, voted in favour of the former leader's petition to stay out of jail, challengin­g his colleagues to buck pressure from society. "If a court bows (to pressure), it might as well not exist," said Mendes.

Justice system at stake

Justice Luis Roberto Barroso argued that the integrity of the justice system was at stake. "A penal system that doesn't work with minimal effectiven­ess leads to an instinct for taking justice into one's own hands," said Barroso, who voted against the petition. "A penal system that doesn't work with minimal effectiven­ess leads to an instinct for taking justice into one's own hands," said Barroso, who voted against the petition.

“I want this to be registered in the court’s records,” Mello told Lucia, who responded by saying “yes” to the request.

The session reflected the debate happening across Brazil as millions tuned into the televised session. When the decision was levelled, fireworks and yells could be heard and seen in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, two of the nation’s most important cities.

Lula was once wildly popular after his two terms as president from 2003 to 2010, but he has become a polarising figure amid the ‘Car Wash’ corruption scandal that has roiled Brazil the last several years and made average citizens furious with the political class.

Lula was convicted in July of helping a constructi­on company get sweetheart contracts in exchange for the promise of a beachfront apartment. He denies any wrongdoing in that case or in several other corruption cases that have yet to be tried. An appeals court upheld the conviction in January, and the three reviewing magistrate­s even lengthened the sentence to 12 years and one month.

Technicall­y, the Supreme Federal Tribunal’s decision doesn’t keep Lula off the ballot. The country’s top electoral court makes final decisions about candidacie­s beginning in August, but it has been expected to deny Lula’s candidacy under Brazil’s ‘clean slate’ law, which disqualifi­es people who have had criminal conviction­s upheld.

 ??  ?? In this May 10, 2017 AP photo, demonstrat­ors stand near a large inflata table doll depicting former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in prison garb in Curitiba, Brazil. Lula appears bound for prison after a ruling agaainst him by Brazil’s top court on Thursday, April 5.
In this May 10, 2017 AP photo, demonstrat­ors stand near a large inflata table doll depicting former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in prison garb in Curitiba, Brazil. Lula appears bound for prison after a ruling agaainst him by Brazil’s top court on Thursday, April 5.

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