The Borneo Post

Brazil’s Lula denounces violence on campaign trail

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CURITIBA, Brazil: Brazil’s former leftist leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Wednesday denounced violent protesters during his presidenti­al campaign tour and vowed he’d return to power anyway.

In a day that laid bare the raw divisions in Brazil ahead of October presidenti­al elections, Lula angrily told a crowd of several thousand in the southern city of Curitiba that all along his 10day bus tour of the region he had been dogged by anti- democratic opponents.

Late Tuesday, his convoy was shot at, he said, with three bullets hitting two buses, although no one was injured. Earlier, people had thrown stones and eggs at his buses and while he was on stage.

“I only know that they’re not democrats. They’re more fascists and Nazis than anything else,” he said.

Even as Lula spoke to his redshirted supporters, opponents positioned in buildings overlookin­g the square tried to drown him out by banging pots and letting off fireworks. Large numbers of police stood by, separating the rally from a smaller counter-protest held by a right-wing group.

Lula – who easily leads in the polls despite fighting to avoid having to serve a 12-year prison sentence for corruption – was defiant.

“Save your rockets for Jan 1, when I am sworn in,” he said.

Hours earlier, his closest rival, right-wing former army captain Jair Bolsonaro, met nearby with several hundred cheering supporters in Curitiba.

Denouncing Lula as a “scoundrel,” Bolsonaro told the crowd: “We can’t accept elections without Lula being locked up.”

Bolsonaro, who has praised torture and Brazil’s two- decadelong military dictatorsh­ip, didn’t mention Tuesday’s shooting incident.

Instead he repeated his campaign promise to loosen gun laws and get tough on crime. “I want a ... police that shoots to kill,” he said.

However, many other major politician­s denounced the apparent attack on Lula.

Center-right President Michel Temer expressed “regret” and said: “We need to reunite Brazilians. We need to pacify the country. This wave of violence, this climate of ‘us against them,’ cannot continue.”

For 27-year- old university professor Leticia Mreuz, who turned out in Curitiba to hear Lula speak, the harassment during his campaign swing spelled trouble.

“I think Lula is the victim of political persecutio­n. This is a time of fear,” she said.

When Lula left office after two terms at the start of 2011, he was Brazil’s most popular president on record, having presided over a commoditie­s-fueled economic boom and winning plaudits for his social policies.

However, he inspires equally passionate opposition and is blamed by the right and many in the centre for Brazil’s slide into the mammoth ‘Car Wash’ corruption scandal that has shaken the country over the last four years.

Although dozens of other top politician­s, including Temer, have also been charged or convicted, right-wing opponents see Lula as the graft scandal’s biggest culprit. On the left, Lula is seen as the victim of politicize­d judges. — AFP

 ??  ?? Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva

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