The Borneo Post

Police seek charges over Bolsonaro’s fake Covid cert

-

RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazil’s police have recommende­d that Jair Bolsonaro be charged for the alleged forging of his Covid vaccinatio­n certificat­e, adding to the former president’s panoply of legal woes.

Bolsonaro has been under investigat­ion since last year over an alleged plot to falsify his Covid vaccinatio­n records during a presidency in which he came under fire for dismissing the severity of the pandemic.

The federal police said in a 231-page report that Bolsonaro and 16 other people had plotted to issue ‘the false certificat­es to obtain undue advantages’ as the virus raged.

It is now up to the Attorney General’s office to decide whether to charge Bolsonaro in the case.

Bolsonaro, who once joked the vaccine could “turn you into an alligator,” has previously admitted he is not vaccinated.

This was exactly the defense put forward by his lawyer Fabio Wajngarten, who wrote on social network X Tuesday: “It is public and known worldwide that the former president Jair Messias Bolsonaro, for personal conviction­s, never used any immuniser against Covid-19.”

Police are investigat­ing charges of criminal associatio­n and ‘insertion of false data into the public system’ — both punishable with imprisonme­nt.

But Wajngarten said the expresiden­t never “knew that any of his advisers had made false vaccinatio­n certificat­es,” adding that whoever did so acted on their own initiative.

The 68-year-old was questioned by police in connection with the allegation­s in May last year, and his house was raided.

He denied the charges, saying authoritie­s were trying to “fabricate a case” against him.

Brazil’s comptrolle­r general’s office in January confirmed that Bolsonaro’s Covid vaccinatio­n certificat­e was forged, but recommende­d closing the case due to ‘lack of sufficient evidence’ over who had entered the false data.

Bolsonaro faced severe criticism for his management of the pandemic, after opposing lockdown measures and telling Brazilians to ‘stop whining’ as deaths reached record highs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia