The Daily Telegraph

French first lady rebukes Bolsonaro

- By David Chazan in Paris and Euan Marshall in Sao Paulo

Brigitte Macron responded sharply last night after Jair Bolsonaro, the Brazilian president, appeared to mock her age, in a war of words that has left £18 million in G7 funding to stop the Amazon wildfires in limbo. The French first lady, 65, responding to a post on Mr Bolsonaro’s Facebook page, said: “There are those who are on the train of change ... some are still on the platform.” Mr Bolsonaro has been accused of allowing fires to rage unchecked.

BRIGITTE MACRON, France’s first lady, hit back last night at mockery of her age and appearance by Jair Bolsonaro, amid a war of words between the Brazilian president and her husband that has left £18 million in emergency funding for the Amazon fires in limbo.

Her comments came as Mr Bolsonaro, accused by critics of allowing tens of thousands of fires to rage unchecked in the Amazon rainforest, announced a two-month ban on fires deliberate­ly started by farmers.

Critics have accused the leader of allowing farmers to start fires in order to clear forest for crops or grazing, labelling him “Captain Chainsaw”.

Mrs Macron, 65, implied that the 64-year-old president was out of tune with contempora­ry attitudes to women and then thanked the thousands of Brazilians who had offered apologies on social media for their president’s approval of a post deriding her for being nearly 25 years older than Emmanuel Macron, her husband.

The post implied that Michelle Bolsonaro, the 37-year-old wife of Mr Bolsonaro, 64, was better looking than the French first lady.

Mrs Macron said: “Times are changing. There are those who are on the train of change, women are there with you, like you, you’ve almost all understood, gentlemen. Not everyone, some are still on the platform and I’m sure they will soon get on the train.”

Her comments won sustained applause as she inaugurate­d a newly refurbishe­d museum devoted to the Battle of Agincourt at a ceremony with Lord Llewellyn of Steep, the British ambassador, at the site of the 1415 English victory in northern France.

The diplomatic clash between the French and Brazilian presidents came as Mr Macron tried to lead internatio­nal efforts to help Brazil put out the fires, which he sees as a global problem because the world’s largest rainforest produces 20 per cent of its oxygen.

Mr Bolsonaro rejected £18million in aid from the G7 announced at a summit hosted by Mr Macron in the coastal resort of Biarritz at the weekend. But he has accepted a separate £10million offer of assistance from the UK.

State governors and agribusine­ss leaders from the Amazon have implored Mr Bolsonaro to accept financial aid from the G7, fearing that continued tensions could harm Brazil’s exports.

Mr Bolsonaro has now outlawed all uses of fire in the region except for farming in indigenous communitie­s, but he stressed that the ban was only temporary. “The people there set these fires, it’s a tradition,” he said.

Data from Brazil’s Institute of Space Research has shown the increase in fires this year is linked to a rise in deforestat­ion, with illegal land grabbers clearing areas of virgin forest in order to sell to agribusine­ss firms.

Under domestic and internatio­nal pressure, the government is expected to launch a series of environmen­t related measures next week including curbs on deforestat­ion and gold panning.

Local media warned of a new Amazon gold rush stemming from relaxed oversight and poverty.

On Wednesday, Donald Trump lent his support to Mr Bolsonaro.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom