The Borneo Post

Thousands protest ahead of Brazil court’s ruling on Lula prison

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SAO PAULO: Thousands of Brazilians demonstrat­ed in favour of prison for former president and election frontrunne­r Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on the eve of a Supreme Court ruling yesterday on whether he should start serving a 12 year sentence for corruption.

Up to 20,000 people turned out after work in the country’s biggest city, Sao Paulo, as well as a few thousand in Rio de Janeiro and smaller numbers in other cities.

The head of the army, General Eduardo Villas Boas, tweeted that the military shared Brazilians’ “desire for the repudiatio­n of impunity.”

The protesters demanded that Lula begin his sentence and be barred from the Oct 7 presidenti­al election in which the veteran leftist is leading in the polls, despite his legal problems.

“We want Brazil to be freed of this shameful corruption. Imprison Lula and let Brazil turn the page,” said Mara Massa, 67, at the protest in Sao Paulo, where the crowd chanted ‘No more Lula!’

Smaller demonstrat­ions in favor of the Workers’ Party founder also took place around the country.

The court showdown scheduled in the capital Brasilia on Wednesday has become a focal point for Brazil’s deeply divided electorate.

Lula, 72, was sentenced to 12 years and one month in prison after being convicted last year of accepting a seaside apartment as a bribe from a huge constructi­on company seeking government contracts. He appealed in a lower court, but lost.

Under current law, that means he should go immediatel­y to prison, while pressing further appeals. However, Lula has asked the Supreme Court to grant him habeas corpus recourse, allowing him to remain free while pursuing those appeals.

The court is believed to be evenly split on the issue, so that one judge changing position would be enough to secure Lula’s freedom -and boost his uphill bid for a third term in office.

If the court turns him down, he could face jail this week.

Those on the left who remember Lula for lifting tens of millions of people out of poverty during his two terms from 2003-2010 consider the threat of prison an attack on democracy.

Lula told a large crowd in Rio de Janeiro late Monday that he saw his fight as continuati­on of the struggle against a two- decade dictatorsh­ip that ended in 1985.

“I did not accept the military dictatorsh­ip and I will not accept this dictatorsh­ip of the prosecutor­s,” he said.

Ahead of Villas Boas’s unusual comments, an army reservist general lashed out in Estadao newspaper that a Supreme Court ruling that freed Lula would “induce” violence and “fratricida­l conflict.”

General Luiz Gonzaga Schroeder Lessa, who has a history of making provocativ­e remarks, even appeared to threaten a coup, saying an eventual Lula election victory would “leave no recourse but an armed reaction. The armed forces would have to restore order.”

The top court is also under huge pressure from prosecutor­s like Deltan Dallagnol, who are spearheadi­ng Brazil’s mammoth ‘Car Wash’ anti-graft probe, which has netted scores of high-ranking politician­s beyond Lula. — AFP

 ??  ?? Teachers rally inside of the state Capitol rotunda on the second day of a teacher walkout to demand higher pay and more funding for education in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, US. — Reuters photo
Teachers rally inside of the state Capitol rotunda on the second day of a teacher walkout to demand higher pay and more funding for education in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, US. — Reuters photo

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