The Philippine Star

Raucous impeachmen­t vs Brazil president begins

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BRASILIA ( Reuters) — Pro-impeachmen­t lawmakers chanted “Dilma Out” in the lower house of Brazil’s Congress on Friday, as it opened a raucous three-day debate on whether to impeach President Dilma Rousseff on charges of breaking budget laws.

Pro- government demonstrat­ors took to the streets in several states amid fears of violence as the debate began. Major trade unions and landless peasant movements will stage a bigger nationwide protest today, when the debate is set to culminate with a vote that Rousseff is widely expected to lose.

The government lost a lastditch appeal on Thursday before the Supreme Court to halt the impeachmen­t process, which could bring further instabilit­y or even chaos to Latin America’s largest economy after 13 years of rule by the leftist Workers’ Party.

Rousseff is accused of manipulati­ng budget accounts in 2014 to secure her re-election.

She has strongly rejected the accusation and planned to appeal to Brazilians in a televised speech. But the increasing­ly isolated leader canceled the broadcast after an opposition party sought a court injunction to block it, arguing that she was unfairly using resources of the Brazilian state to defend herself.

Rousseff is fighting to survive a political storm fueled by Brazil’s worst recession since the Great Depression in the 1930s and a spiraling corruption scandal that has reached her inner circle.

In a further blow for the president, Minister for Cities Gilberto Kassab resigned his post late on Friday, according to two sources familiar with the matter. His Brazil Social Democratic Party (PSD) split from the government on Wednesday and said it would vote for Rousseff’s impeachmen­t.

Police stepped up security in the Brazilian capital where a kilometer-long metal fence has been erected on the grass esplanade opposite Congress to avoid clashes between rival demonstrat­ors expected to turn out by the tens of thousands over the weekend.

 ?? AP ?? Brazil’s Attorney General Jose Eduardo Cardozo, backed by posters behind that say ‘Impeachmen­t without a crime is a coup,’ defends Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff during a debate in Brasilia Friday.
AP Brazil’s Attorney General Jose Eduardo Cardozo, backed by posters behind that say ‘Impeachmen­t without a crime is a coup,’ defends Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff during a debate in Brasilia Friday.

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