The Press

Ruling may result in Da Silva’s release

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Brazil’s Supreme Court delivered a narrow decision yesterday that could release almost 5000 inmates still appealing their conviction­s, including jailed former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

The court decided in a 6-5 vote that a person can be imprisoned only after all appeals to higher courts have been exhausted.

The decision appears to cover Da Silva and others convicted in cases arising from the sprawling ‘‘Car Wash’’ corruption investigat­ion, which has ensnared dozens of top politician­s and business leaders in Latin America’s biggest nation.

The Supreme Court’s debate began in mid-October and its result could throw Brazil’s political landscape into uncertaint­y. Da Silva had been favoured to win the 2018 presidenti­al election, but his conviction prohibited him from running.

He remains a popular figure on the Left, whose politician­s and voters have ceaselessl­y called for his release and celebrated yesterday’s ruling.

The former president’s attorneys said in a statement they would request his release today. That move would initially depend on a judge based in the southern city of Curitiba, where Da Silva was jailed.

Prosecutor­s from the Car Wash probe said in a statement that the decision ‘‘goes against the sentiment of repudiatin­g impunity and the fight against corruption’’.

The decision marks a sharp change for Brazil’s top court, which in February 2016 accepted that defendants whose conviction­s are upheld may be jailed even if their other appeals are pending. Brazil’s constituti­on states that no-one can be considered guilty until due process is concluded.

Da Silva, universall­y known to Brazilians as Lula, presided over a period of rapid economic growth from 2003 to 2010 fuelled by a commoditie­s boom that expanded the country’s middle class.

His huge Bolsa Familia welfare programme helped lift millions from poverty, and he left office with an approval rating above 80 per cent. The former union leader is widely referred to as a ‘‘political animal’’ whose impassione­d oratory can just as easily elicit laughter or tears from those among his faithful.

Justice Gilmar Mendes, who voted for the release of inmates who have yet to conclude their appeals, said Da Silva’s case ‘‘contaminat­ed’’ debate on the case. –AP

The thunderous strains of Richard Wagner’s operas have fostered many great and terrible things over the years, from lifting Stephen Hawking’s spirits to cementing Adolf Hitler in his sense of Germany’s ancestral greatness.

Now it appears to have prompted a bomb alert at a Viennese concert hall after a concealed sex toy began vibrating in sympathy with Wagner’s music.

Police rushed to the capital’s Konzerthau­s following reports from a member of the cloakroom staff that he had noticed a suitcase ‘‘shaking suspicious­ly’’.

It is not clear what set the item off but it may not have been unrelated to the Viennese symphony orchestra’s performanc­e of the Siegfried Idyll and the first act of The Valkyrie.

An explosives expert examined the offending suitcase but found no obvious signs of a bomb. Eventually the source of the buzzing was identified as a vibrator that had seemingly switched on of its own accord.

According to the daily Kurier, the strange incident did not disturb the audience and the performanc­e at the city’s venerable concert hall continued uninterrup­ted.

‘‘After the performanc­e had finished, the suitcase was handed over to its owner and his lady friend,’’ police said in a statement. ‘‘They were informed of the incident and the officers wished them a nice evening.’’ – The Times

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