The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Protests erupt after release of RousseffLu­la recording

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BRAS LIA: Protests have erupted in Brazil after a recorded phone call between President Dilma Rousseff and her once-popular predecesso­r was released, suggesting that she appointed him to her cabinet to spare him from arrest for corruption.

Rousseff appointed Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as her chief of staff on Wednesday hoping that his political prowess can save her administra­tion. The president is battling an impeachmen­t attempt, a deep recession, and the fallout of an explosive corruption scandal at state oil giant Petrobras.

However hours after Lula’s appointmen­t, federal judge Sergio Moro, who is heading a probe into the Petrobras scandal, ordered the release of a call recorded by police suggesting darker motives.

Rousseff called Lula’s bugged phone to tell him she would be sending him the official decree nominating him as her chief of staff so that he could make use of it “if necessary.”

That extract seems to confirm that Lula’s nomination to the post was aimed at sparing him possible arrest for corruption.

Cabinet ministers can only be tried before the Supreme Court in Brazil, and ministeria­l immunity will now protect Lula from prosecutio­n in criminal court.

Lula vigorously denies involvemen­t in the scandal, in which investigat­ors say constructi­on companies conspired with Petrobras executives to overbill the oil giant to the tune of 2 billion, paying huge bribes to politician­s and parties along the way.

Rousseff’s office said the phone call was merely to discuss a procedural matter.

The recording’s release caused an uproar in Congress, where furious opposition lawmakers shouted “Resign! Resign!”

Some 2,000 people spontaneou­sly gathered in the capital Brasilia to demand that Lula step down and Rousseff leave office.

“Instead of explaining himself

Instead of explaining himself and assuming his responsibi­lities, former president Lula preferred to flee out the back door.

and assuming his responsibi­lities, former president Lula preferred to flee out the back door,” said lawmaker Antonio Imbassahy, lower house leader for opposition party PMDB.

“It’s a confession of guilt and a slap to society. President Dilma, by appointing him, has become his accomplice,” Imbassahy added. “The final chapter in this story will be her impeachmen­t.”

As night fell, another protest broke out in Sao Paulo.

“Resign! Resign!” shouted several thousand protesters gathered outside the building housing FIESP, a powerful federation of Sao Paulo industries. The building was illuminate­d in green and yellow – Brazil’s national colors – and included a large inscriptio­n that read “Impeach now.”

The impeachmen­t push is not directly related to the corruption scandal, but has advanced in tandem with it.

The president’s office responded by announcing that “judicial and administra­tive measures” would be taken to “repair the flagrant violation of the law and the constituti­on committed” by judge Moro, but gave no specifics.

On social media, critics gleefully quoted Lula’s own words as a rabble-rousing labor leader back to him: “In Brazil, when a poor person steals, he goes to prison. When a rich person steals, he becomes a cabinet minister!”

Some three million Brazilians flooded the streets in nationwide protests on Sunday calling for Rousseff’s departure.

Rousseff fired back at her critics in a press conference.

“Lula’s arrival in my government strengthen­s it and there are people who don’t want it to be stronger,” she said. — AFP

Antonio Imbassahy, lower house leader for opposition party PMDB

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors attend a protest at the appointmen­t of Brazil’s former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as a minister, in Sao Paulo, Brazil,Wednesday. — Reuters photo
Demonstrat­ors attend a protest at the appointmen­t of Brazil’s former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as a minister, in Sao Paulo, Brazil,Wednesday. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Dilma Rousseff
Dilma Rousseff

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