The Borneo Post

Brazil president Temer avoids corruption trial

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BRAS LIA: Brazil’s Congress rejected corruption charges against President Michel Temer on Wednesday, meaning he will not have to face trial and is free to pursue austerity reforms in Latin America’s biggest economy.

The vote in the lower house threw out the charges just an hour after Temer, 77, was discharged from the Brasilia hospital where he had been admitted earlier with a blocked urinary tract.

Temer’s allies had been widely expected to bar a demand by prosecutor­s for the president to face trial in the Supreme Court, but a note of drama was injected by the surprise news that he had been taken to hospital.

The president was admitted to the Army Hospital in the capital complainin­g of discomfort and underwent examinatio­n with a urinary catheter. He was then told to rest at home, the presidency said.

Following the medical scare, Temer said, “I am in one piece,” although he could have said the same thing about his escape from a potential trial.

The first president in the country to face criminal charges while still in office, Temer is accused of obstructio­n of justice and racketeeri­ng. He denies any wrongdoing.

The lower house of Congress would have had to vote by a twothirds majority to force Temer to stand down for 180 days and go on trial in the Supreme Court. However allies racked up a total of 251 votes, well above what was needed to prevent opponents reaching a super-majority.

A canny veteran of Brasilia’s notoriousl­y corrupt political scene, Temer has painted himself as indispensa­ble when the country is making a cautious recovery from a deep recession.

In August, allies in Congress had already thrown out a bribery charge by a heavy margin.

“Those who underestim­ated him made a mistake,” said loyalist legislator Carlos Marun, from Temer’s PMDB party.

Ironically, what made it easier for Temer was that scores of those judging him in the lower house are themselves targets of anticorrup­tion probes.

Many deputies want to slow down Brazil’s energetic anticorrup­tion prosecutor­s who have unleashed the historic ‘Car Wash’ probe against the country’s elite over the last three years.

The vote clearing Temer “was a terrible result for Brazil because the lower house obstructed justice. It is preventing someone from answering for crimes committed and that someone is no less than the president of the republic,” Alessandro Molon, from the leftist Rede party, said afterward.

Critics say the president boosted his chances of survival through blatant vote buying, opening up the budgetary purse to give Congress members the projects back in their home states that will help their own causes.

Among the sweeteners handed out by Temer were removing Sao Paulo’s Congonhas airport from a list of big privatizat­ions and lowering environmen­tal protection fines — a gesture to the powerful agricultur­al industry lobby.

Temer had “more than sufficient votes to turn the page, even with an erosion of his political capital,” a government source who asked not to be identified told AFP.

Opposition deputies acknowledg­ed they did not have the numbers to bring down Temer, despite his huge unpopulari­ty with Brazilians. — AFP

 ??  ?? General view at the Chamber of Deputies of the Brazilian Congress, following the voting to decide on the corruption charges against Temer, in Brasilia. — AFP photo
General view at the Chamber of Deputies of the Brazilian Congress, following the voting to decide on the corruption charges against Temer, in Brasilia. — AFP photo

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