The Press

Brazil’s once-adored ex-president faces jail for corruption

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BRAZIL: Former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was found guilty of corruption and money laundering yesterday and sentenced to almost 10 years in prison, the highest-profile conviction yet in the sprawling graft investigat­ion that has jailed dozens of Brazil’s elite.

The decision by Judge Sergio Moro was widely expected but was still stunning.

The charismati­c leader left office on December 31, 2010, with sky-high popularity and is credited with pulling millions of Brazilians out of poverty and turning Latin America’s largest nation into an important global player.

Brazil’s first working class president is free pending an appeal, but he is now also the country’s first ex-president to be convicted in a criminal proceeding at least since democracy was restored in the 1980s.

In many quarters, the man known to Brazilians simply as Lula remains revered – both for his economic policies and his role in fighting for democracy during the country’s dictatorsh­ip. The 71-year-old has been considered a frontrunne­r for next year’s presidenti­al election.

Silva’s defence team issued a scathing statement after the ruling, calling the charges an attack on democracy and vowing to prove the former president’s innocence.

``President Lula has been the victim of lawfare, the use of the law for political ends, the famous method used to brutal effect in various dictatorsh­ips throughout history,’' the lawyers said.

The case is part of the huge ``Operation Car Wash’' corruption investigat­ion centred on state-run oil giant Petrobras that has led to the conviction­s of dozens of business executives and politician­s, and threatens current President Michel Temer.

Silva was accused of receiving a beachfront apartment and repairs to the property as kickbacks from constructi­on company OAS. Silva never owned the apartment, but prosecutor­s argued it was intended for him. Prosecutor­s also alleged that OAS paid to store Silva’s belongings, but Moro dismissed that part of the case.

Silva also faces charges in four other cases. The former union leader has said all the charges are completely unfounded, and his defiant testimony in the case decided on Wednesday was billed as a showdown between himself and Moro. Both men are viewed as national heroes by some parts of Brazilian society.

``The present conviction does not bring this judge any personal satisfacti­on. Quite the contrary, it is regrettabl­e that a former president be criminally convicted,’' Moro wrote in his decision. ``It doesn’t matter how high you are, the law is still above you.’'

Moro said he did not order Silva’s immediate arrest because the conviction of a president is such a serious matter that he felt the former leader’s appeal should be heard first.

``This makes Lula’s situation much worse since it is much more than a mere investigat­ion,’' said Claudio Couto, a political science professor at Fundacao Getulio Vargas, a Sao Paulo-based university and think tank. ``But now he will do something he likes: Until the appeal is decided, he will rally his allies and supporters against a decision that is controvers­ial.’'

A few hundred supporters gathered in Sao Paulo on Wednesday night to denounce the ruling, while a smaller group of people took to the streets to celebrate Silva’s conviction.

``It was an obviously political decision to prevent Lula from becoming president,’' said Armando Teixeira, an unemployed auto worker. ``Everyone knows he will win if he runs.’'

The case now goes before a group of magistrate­s. If they uphold the conviction, Brazilian law says Silva would be barred from seeking office. In addition to sentencing Silva to 91⁄2 years in prison, Moro also ruled that the politician should be barred from public office for 19 years.

The prosecutor’s office that handled the case said it would appeal the sentence to ask for it to be increased.

Silva’s presidency coincided with an economic boom fuelled by high commodity prices and he used the profits to fund generous social programmes that made him a hero among Brazil’s poor. He left office with popularity ratings of up to 87 per cent and Brazilians elected his hand-picked successor, Dilma Rousseff, to succeed him.

But a subsequent fall in commodity prices and economic mismanagem­ent by Silva and Rousseff led Brazil’s economy to implode, and with it Rousseff’s popularity. Rousseff was later impeached and replaced by Temer. – AP

 ??  ?? Supporters of former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, right, protest after he was convicted on corruption charges and sentenced to nearly 10 years in prison, in Porto Alegre.
Supporters of former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, right, protest after he was convicted on corruption charges and sentenced to nearly 10 years in prison, in Porto Alegre.
 ?? PHOTOS: REUTERS ??
PHOTOS: REUTERS

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