Gulf News

Scandal and coups — life as Brazil’s leader

Presidents rule over a resource-rich country — but then something always goes wrong

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Suicide, coup d’etat, impeachmen­t, scandal or prison: get elected president in Brazil and you’re almost guaranteed an unhappy ending.

When Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was locked up in federal police headquarte­rs in Curitiba to begin a 12-year sentence for corruption on Saturday, it was a bombshell.

A two-term former president who left office in 2011 as one of the most popular men on the planet, Lula is the front-runner in October presidenti­al elections.

But seen another way, Lula’s brutal political demise was practicall­y business as usual.

Brazilian presidents get to live in an incredible Oscar Niemeyer-designed palace in Brasilia. They rule over a resourceri­ch country of 209 million people with the world’s biggest rainforest and possibly the best football team.

Then somehow things tend to go wrong.

At least Lula finished his two terms. His successor Dilma Rousseff, whom he propelled to victory in 2010, was stripped of office in impeachmen­t proceeding­s for cooking the budget books in 2016, halfway through her second term.

Inheriting the green and yellow sash was her vice president, Michel Temer.

He’s still there, but his future’s murky. Last year he was twice charged with corruption, becoming the first Brazilian president to face criminal prosecutio­n while still in office.

For now, at least, he remains shielded by presidenti­al immunity.

Risky business

Go back a little further, to 1992, and you have president Fernando Collor de Mello. He was impeached after corruption allegation­s and resigned two years into his first term.

Prosecutor­s are after him again now and in 2015 they impounded his spectacula­r fleet of luxury cars.

Oh and just for good measure, another of the five living ex-presidents — Jose Sarney, who ruled from 1985-1990 — is also facing a corruption probe.

“Going into politics is a risky business,” columnist Angela Alonso wrote Sunday in Folha de S. Paulo newspaper. “In Brazil there’s a risk of losing an election, your freedom (prison is in vogue) and your life.”

That was especially true for president Joao Goulart, known to everyone as Jango.

He became president in 1961 after the resignatio­n of Janio Quadros, who lasted barely half a year in office. Then in 1964, Goulart was overthrown in the military coup which would install a dictatorsh­ip lasting two decades.

Most tragic of all Brazil’s leaders was Getulio Vargas. A populist, he ruled in two periods through the 1930s-1950s.

Then 24 August, 1954, he shot himself through the heart with a revolver in his presidenti­al palace, leaving a suicide note to the Brazilian people, reading: “I gave you my life, now I give you my death.”

 ?? AFP ?? Brazilian ex-president (2003-2011) Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (left) speaks next to Brazilian former president (2011-2016) Dilma Rousseff before he was taken to prison on Saturday.
AFP Brazilian ex-president (2003-2011) Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (left) speaks next to Brazilian former president (2011-2016) Dilma Rousseff before he was taken to prison on Saturday.

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