The Manila Times

BRAZIL’S ROUSSEFF STRIPPED OF PRESIDENCY

- AFP

BRASÍLIA: Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff was stripped of the country’s presidency in an impeachmen­t vote on Wednesday (Thursday in Manila) and replaced by her bitter rival Michel Temer, shifting Latin America’s biggest economy sharply to the right.

Rousseff, 68, was convicted by 61 of the 81 senators of illegally manipulati­ng the national budget. The two-thirds majority, meant the veteran leftist leader was immediatel­y

Three hours later, Temer -- her center-right former vice president and one time crucial coalition partner whom she now accuses of orchestrat­ing a coup against her -- was sworn in.

Cheers -- and cries of disappoint­ment -- erupted in the blue-carpeted, circular Senate chamber as the im electronic voting screen.

Pro-impeachmen­t senators sang the national anthem, some waving Rousseff stood stony faced.

“I will not associate my name with this infamy,” read a sign held up by one senator. “Coup plotters!” others chanted. In a surprise twist, a separate vote to bar Rousseff from holding any pass, meaning she could in theory re-enter political life.

Speaking at the Alvorada presidenti­al palace on the outskirts of the capital Brasilia, Rousseff, from the leftist Work

“They decided to interrupt the mandate of a president who had committed no crime. They have convicted an innocent person and carried out a parliament­ary coup,” “be back,” she said.

- day to China for a G20 summit. A recorded address to the nation was

A stalwart of the center-right PMDB party, Temer has vowed to steer Brazil away from 13 years of Workers’ Party rule in hopes that a more market-friendly track will resolve the country’s worst recession in decades.

Anti-Rousseff anger

Rousseff is accused of taking illegal state loans to patch budget holes in 2014, masking the country’s problems as it slid into today’s economic disarray.

She told the Senate during a marathon 14-hour session on Monday that she is innocent and that abuse of the impeachmen­t process put Brazil’s democracy, restored in 1985 after a two-decades-long military dictatorsh­ip, at risk.

Recalling how she was tortured and imprisoned in the 1970s for belonging to a leftist guerrilla group, Rousseff urged senators to “vote against impeachmen­t, vote for democracy.”

However, huge anti- Rousseff street demonstrat­ions over the last year have reflected nationwide anger at her management of a country suffering double-digit

The once mighty Workers’ Party, meanwhile, has struggled to stage more than small rallies.

Temer, who was in an uncomforta­ble partnershi­p with Rousseff before - in late 2018.

Better known as a backroom wheelerdea­ler than street politician, Temer took over in an interim role after Rousseff’s initial suspension in May.

He immediatel­y named a new government that turned its back on more than a decade of leftist rule in which Brazil saw 29 million people lifted from poverty, but became bogged down in corruption and the ongoing economic slump.

Temer has earned plaudits from investors. It remains uncertain whether he will have voters’ support to push through the painful austerity reforms he promises.

Emotions spill over

About 50 leftist demonstrat­ors gathered outside the presidenti­al palace to show their support for Rousseff.

“We are protesting against the coup and fighting for democracy,” said 61- year- old farmer Orlando Ribeiro.

security and the closing of avenues jams. Police said they were preparing for large protests later in the day.

Venezuela and Ecuador both pulled their ambassador­s from Brazil in pro- test at Rousseff’s removal.

crackled in the run-up to the vote, of the debate agreed was history in the making.

Renan Calheiros, the Senate president, rejected Rousseff’s claim of a coup, saying her impeachmen­t might not have been perfect, but had “the DNA of democracy, the DNA of the constituti­on.”

Senator Aecio Neves, Rousseff’s narrowly defeated center-right opponent in her 2014 reelection, pronounced triumphant­ly: “The constituti­on won. Brazil won!”

But Senator Vanessa Grazziotin was scathing in her summing up of an “illegal process that is called impeachmen­t but is a coup.”

“Temer does not have legitimacy to govern this country,” she warned.

“This is a farce, a farce, a farce,” shouted another pro-Rousseff senator, Lindberg Farias.

Shaking his fists at the majority backing impeachmen­t, he cried: “They’re going in the garbage can of history.”

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Dilma Rousseff

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