Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Law targets critics of Brazil’s president

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SAO PAULO — Police in Brazil are starting to employ a dictatorsh­ip-era national security law against critics of President Jair Bolsonaro, while lawyers and activists rally to provide them with legal help and accuse the government of trying to silence dissent.

On Friday, demonstrat­ors challenged police in the capital by parading with anti-Bolsonaro signs a day after four protesters were detained. They had called the president “genocidal” for his handling of the pandemic and displayed a cartoon depicting him next to a Nazi swastika. Officers took no action Friday as about 40 people protested for an hour.

The national security law, which dates from 1983, near the end of the country’s military dictatorsh­ip, makes it a crime to harm the heads of the three branches of government or expose them to danger. The vague measure has recently been used to detain or investigat­e Bolsonaro critics.

Geography teacher Katia Garcia said she showed up in front of the president’s office Friday because the arrests had inspired her.

“They were jailed because the descriptio­n ‘genocidal’ suits our president very well,” Ms. Garcia said. “He has contribute­d to our health care system collapsing,

for the lack of vaccines. Police can’t silence us.”

There have been previous charges against prominent critics of the president, including a newspaper columnist, a political cartoonist and a popular YouTube star, but the law is increasing­ly being employed against ordinary citizens. Courts haven’t upheld any of the arrests so far, but lawyers are expressing alarm that the tactic is becoming common place.

Both demonstrat­ions in Brasilia called for Mr. Bolsonaro’s impeachmen­t due to his administra­tion’s alleged failings in the pandemic, which has caused almost 290,000 deaths in Brazil. The country has reported nearly 3,000 deaths each day this week.

On several instances, the president has complained that he is being unfairly vilified, most recently Thursday night during a live Facebook broadcast.

“They call me a dictator. I want you to point at one thing I did in two years and two months that was autocratic,” he said while complainin­g about a newspaper column that used the word genocidal to describe him.

Brasilia police said Thursday that the four detained protesters violated the national security law “as they showed a swastika in associatio­n to the symbol of the president of the Republic.” But Brazil’s federal police force, which decides whether cases brought by local police deserve to go ahead in national security crimes, dismissed the case and released three of the four demonstrat­ors. One was held on an outstandin­g warrant froma previous case.

Federal police have conducted more than 80 investigat­ions under the security law during Mr. Bolsonaro’s first two years and more than 10 in the first 45 days of 2021, according to the newspaper O Globo. The yearly average before the conservati­ve leader took office was 11.

The cases appear to almost entirely target Mr. Bolsonaro’s critics, human rights organizati­ons and activists say.

One case last year involved a sociologis­t and a businessma­n who paid for two billboards that insulted Mr. Bolsonaro by saying he wasn’t worth a gnawed piece of fruit. That investigat­ion was requested by Justice Minister André Mendonça, who called it a crime against the president’s reputation. It was dismissed in October.

On Friday night, unsuccessf­ul presidenti­al candidate Ciro Gomes said the federal police were investigat­ing him for calling the president “a thief” in a radio interview in November. The request for the probe was signed by Mr. Bolsonaro himself, Mr. Gomes said on his social media channels.

“I don’t particular­ly care about this act against me, but I think it is serious that Bolsonaro tries to intimidate opponents and adversarie­s,” the left-leaning Mr. Gomes said.

On Monday, police invoked the national security law to force Felipe Neto, a popular You Tuber, to give testimony after he referred to Mr. Bolsonaro as “genocidal” in one of his broadcasts. Federal police dismissed the case two days later amid a public outcry.

Mr. Neto, who was named by Time magazine lasts year as one of the world’s 100 most influentia­l people, was also targeted in November with allegation­s of corrupting minors. Those charges were also dropped.

“From the start, I knew that this attempt at intimidati­on was not aimed at scaring me. It was to scare the Brazilianp­eople,” Mr. Neto said.

 ??  ?? Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro

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