Daily Dispatch

Brazil convict: jailbird by night, congressma­n by day

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FOR many politician­s, a jail sentence means the end of your career, but not for lawmaker Celso Jacob. He still comes each day to Brazil’s National Congress – straight from prison.

Each morning he gets up at 5am in the Papuda jail near Brasilia and waits for a car to take him to work. In the evening he returns and changes from his suit back into white prisoner’s overalls.

“I am imprisoned, but I am not a prisoner,” says the 60-year-old, on day release as he serves a seven-year jail term for administra­tive fraud when he was a mayor.

Many convicts are allowed to work in Brazil under such partial release arrangemen­ts. But Jacob is the only member of Congress known to have been allowed to keep working in such a situation.

Under the partially-open prison regime, he is forbidden from going to the cinema, shopping or visiting his family.

But he is allowed to go to Congress and vote on the nation’s laws and big political issues of the day.

That includes casting a vote in support of President Michel Temer, who himself risks facing trial for corruption.

Jacob became a full member of the lower house of Congress in January. That was partly due to a reshuffle after the speaker of the chamber Eduardo Cunha was sacked, having also been convicted of corruption.

Six months later, a case dating to Jacob’s time as mayor of the town of Tres Rios in 2003 caught up with him.

The Supreme Court found him guilty of forgery and of irregulari­ties in the awarding of a public contract. He was arrested on June 6 at Brasilia airport.

He arrived to prison fearful: with a history of gruesome gang riots, Brazil’s prisons are considered some of the most dangerous in the world.

“The penal system in Brazil is not designed to rehabilita­te anyone,” he said in his office in Congress. “Where I am is better than some places, but I would not recommend it.”

Jacob denies the charges that were made against him, saying he just made “technical” errors.

He says he was tricked by his advisers who slipped an unapproved clause into a legislativ­e bill before handing it to him to sign.

In the case of the public works contract, he says he pushed through the deal to get a nursery built since the project had been delayed for years.

“Those who know me – and in my town they know me well – are suffering with me,” he says.

“Those who don’t know me think I am just another thief who embezzled and robbed.” — AFP

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