Bangkok Post

Fresh bid to impeach Brazil’s Bolsonaro

Previous attempts blocked by key ally

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BRASILIA: Opposition lawmakers in Brazil launched a fresh bid on Wednesday to impeach President Jair Bolsonaro as more allegation­s broke of corruption in acquiring coronaviru­s vaccines to tackle a pandemic he is accused of having criminally mishandled.

A document signed by dozens of left wing political parties, trade unions and civic organisati­ons, as well as a few former allies, was submitted to the chamber of deputies.

It listed more than 20 accusation­s against Mr Bolsonaro, including “neg- ligence” in heading the response to Covid-19 that has killed over 500,000 in Brazil.

The document gathered more than a hundred earlier impeachmen­t filings into one “super request” for Mr Bolsonaro to be relieved of his post, its authors said.

For two months, a senate commission investigat­ing the government’s handling of the pandemic has heard a parade of witnesses testifying how the far-right leader and his government blatantly flouted expert advice on containing the virus.

Mr Bolsonaro minimised the virus as a “little flu”, fought lockdowns, questioned face masks and rejected various offers of vaccines, meanwhile pushing unproven drugs such as chloroquin­e and urging Brazilians to get back to work.

All previous impeachmen­t filings against Mr Bolsonaro have been blocked by the president of the chamber of deputies, Arthur Lira, a key ally.

Observers say it is unlikely Mr Lira will change course now, and even if he did, Mr Bolsonaro’s conservati­ve backers in parliament would save him.

Earlier on Wednesday, a senior official in Brazil’s health ministry resigned after a newspaper published yet more allegation­s of vaccine fraud.

The Folha de S Paulo daily reported that Roberto Dias, the ministry’s logistics director, had sought a bribe from a company said to be negotiatin­g the sale of 400 million doses of AstraZenec­a vaccine to Brazil.

A company representa­tive claimed he had met Mr Dias in a restaurant in a shopping centre in Brasilia in February, where the request was made for payment of a dollar per dose purchased.

Mr Dias has since been fired after the allegation­s emerged, the health ministry said.

AstraZenec­a, for its part, said in a statement it does not use intermedia­ries to sell vaccines to government­s.

Last week, Brazil’s senate heard accusation­s that a deal to purchase another vaccine, Indian-made Covaxin, was a front to embezzle millions of dollars, that a Bolsonaro ally mastermind­ed the plan, and that the president knew all about it.

A health ministry official testified that his superiors had exerted “atypical, excessive” pressure on him to approve payment for the deal he suspected was over-billed.

The official and his brother Luis Miranda, a congressma­n close to Mr Bolsonaro, said they took the matter to the president, but he took no action.

Three Brazilian senators on Monday formally accused Mr Bolsonaro of malfeasanc­e before the Supreme Court.

However, Prosecutor General Augusto Aras, an ally of the president, would have to bring charges for the matter to go ahead.

Anti-Bolsonaro protests are planned in Brasilia this week.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Residents of Cidade de Deusslum receive food donations amid a Covid-19 outbreak, in Rio de Janeiro.
REUTERS Residents of Cidade de Deusslum receive food donations amid a Covid-19 outbreak, in Rio de Janeiro.
 ??  ?? Bolsonaro: Accused of negligence
Bolsonaro: Accused of negligence

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