Cape Argus

Brazilians call for Temer to go

Social movements, trade unions urge mass mobilisati­on

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THE de facto president of Brazil, Michel Temer, asked at the weekend for the suspension of an investigat­ion against him which stems from a recently-leaked audio recording in which he is heard giving his approval for bribes to buy the silence of the former president of the Chamber of Deputies, Eduardo Cunha.

Temer reiterated on Thursday he was not going to quit as president and claimed the audio was part of a plan to jeopardise his leadership.

However, Brazilians have taken to the streets en masse to demand Temer’s resignatio­n and the holding of immediate elections, although the constituti­on would have to be amended in order for elections to be held prior to 2018.

A growing number of social movements, organised by Popular Brasil Front, other trade unions and People Without Fear, have called for mass mobilisati­ons culminatin­g in a civic occupation of Brasilia called Occupy Brasilia on Wednesday.

Occupy Brasilia organisers are hopeful that their mass demonstrat­ions will be a crucial moment leading to the removal of Temer, who oversaw the ousting of democratic­ally re-elected Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff.

Temer’s time in the presidency has been characteri­sed by widespread unpopular austerity measures, such as cuts to social security, retirement pensions and health care, as well as multiple scandals.

Occupy Brasilia was scheduled prior to the release of the publicatio­n of the wire tap, which implicated Temer in a string of bribes.

Joesley Batista, owner of Brazilian meat company JBS, said last week that Temer had received bribes from his company since 2010. That year alone he reportedly received roughly $1 million (R13.2m) from JBS and during Rousseff’s impeachmen­t process had received about $85 000 for online political marketing expenditur­es, said Batista.

The wire tap also revealed that Temer confirmed “Look, you’ve got to keep that up” when Batista confided that bribes were being paid to Eduardo Cunha, former speaker of Brazil’s lower house of representa­tives. These illegal payments were made to keep Cunha’s mouth shut about embarrassi­ng secrets that could jeopardise the legitimacy of Temer’s presidency.

Last week, a survey found that 87% of Brazilians favoured the immediate removal of Temer and 88% supported his impeachmen­t, resignatio­n, or his removal by the Supreme Court.

 ??  ?? OCCUPY BRASILIA: A demonstrat­or holds a sign against Brazil’s President Michel Temer at a burning roadblock set up by protesters in Rio de Janeiro. The signs read in Portuguese: ‘His entire mandate will be quick’, and ‘Not this time. It all ends in...
OCCUPY BRASILIA: A demonstrat­or holds a sign against Brazil’s President Michel Temer at a burning roadblock set up by protesters in Rio de Janeiro. The signs read in Portuguese: ‘His entire mandate will be quick’, and ‘Not this time. It all ends in...

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