The Borneo Post

Lula remains in jail as Brazil judge voids shock release order

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RIO DE JANEIRO: A Brazilian appeals court judge Sunday ruled former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva must remain in jail, in a dizzying day of judicial orders and counter- orders months before the country’s presidenti­al vote.

Though he is serving a 12-year sentence for corruption, the wildly popular leftist Lula, 72, continues to lead opinion polls ahead of October’s election and has vowed his name will be on the ballot.

In his Sunday afternoon ruling, Judge Pedro Gebran Neto overturned a shock order to free Lula, which dropped hours earlier from Judge Rogerio Favreto at an appeals court in the southern city of Porto Alegre -- the same one that had ordered the ex-president’s arrest.

Favreto, the weekend duty judge, had ruled in favour of several deputies of Lula’s Workers’ Party. On Friday they submitted a habeas corpus applicatio­n on the former president’s behalf, arguing he had been illegally imprisoned.

On the heels of the first ruling, top anti- corruption judge Sergio Moro -- who originally sentenced Lula in July 2017 -- said Favreto did not have the power to secure the leftist’s release. Gebran Neto followed suit, instructin­g federal police at a prison in Curitiba city to keep Lula behind bars.

Yet another twist emerged as the tense afternoon wore on.

Favreto insisted his previous order stood, and ordered that Lula should be released within an hour’s time. That deadline passed, and at 6.30pm ( 2130 GMT), Lula remained locked up. More than 1,000 supporters gathered outside his prison in Curitiba, waving banners, Brazilian flags and signs calling for his freedom.

Finally the president of the appeals court Carlos Eduardo Thompson Flores ended the drama for now, ruling that Lula should stay in jail by the earlier ruling.

Lula has been imprisoned since April following his conviction for accepting a seaside apartment as a bribe from Brazilian constructi­on company OAS.

He has insisted on his innocence and branded the corruption accusation­s a political conspiracy aimed at thwarting his electoral aspiration­s.

After ruling Brazil from 2003 to 2011, Lula left office with sky-high ratings following an economic boom and widely praised social programmes to reduce poverty.

“Lula free now!” read his Twitter account after Favreto’s order, expressing hope for “the end of the illegal imprisonme­nt of Lula.”

But even if released, Lula could see his candidacy invalidate­d by the South American country’s electoral court.

Brazilian courts have repeatedly stifled his many efforts to secure freedom.

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 ??  ?? Supporters of Lula (inset) demonstrat­e outside the Federal Police where he is detained in Curitiba, Parana State, Brazil. — AFP photo
Supporters of Lula (inset) demonstrat­e outside the Federal Police where he is detained in Curitiba, Parana State, Brazil. — AFP photo

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