The Philippine Star

Brazil crisis heads into weekend of protests, negotiatio­ns

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BRASILIA (AFP) — Brazil’s political crisis headed into a weekend dominated by protests and President Michel Temer’s attempt to secure enough allies to save himself after being accused of obstructin­g justice.

Temer needs to maintain sufficient backing in Congress to ward off calls for his impeachmen­t barely a year after he took over in the wake of his predecesso­r Dilma Rousseff’s own impeachmen­t.

Today, temperatur­es will rise further with nationwide protests planned by leftist groups demanding Temer step down. The turnout at the protests will be closely watched as a gauge of the public mood.

On Friday, the Supreme Court released court filings in which Prosecutor General Rodrigo Janot accused Temer and a senior senator of attempting to block a huge anti-corruption investigat­ion known as “Car Wash.”

This came after authoritie­s released what they said was a secretly recorded conversati­on between Temer and a business executive in which the president is purported to have given his blessing to monthly payments of hush money to a jailed politician.

That politician — former lower house speaker Eduardo Cunha — is in prison after a “Car Wash” judge convicted him of bribe-taking.

The “Car Wash” investigat­ion has upended Brazil with scores of politician­s indicted or subject to probes into alleged bribe taking and embezzleme­nt.

Cunha, formerly one of the most powerful insiders in Congress, has long been rumored to have threatened to spill secrets on other politician­s to prosecutor­s.

Temer angrily denied any wrongdoing in a televised address Thursday and rebutted mounting calls for his resignatio­n. He has not spoken in public since then.

Adding fuel to the fire was the release Friday of plea bargain testimony by executives at the huge JBS meatpackin­g company indicating that they had given Temer $4.6 million in bribes.

The executives also claimed to have paid $150 million in undeclared campaign funds to former presidents Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Rousseff.

Opponents piled on the pressure, with eight impeachmen­t requests filed in Congress.

 ?? AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors protest along Paulista Avenue in Sao Paulo, Brazil on Thursday to pressure Brazilian President Michel Temer to resign after the Supreme Court gave the green light to an investigat­ion over allegation­s that he authorized paying hush money...
AFP Demonstrat­ors protest along Paulista Avenue in Sao Paulo, Brazil on Thursday to pressure Brazilian President Michel Temer to resign after the Supreme Court gave the green light to an investigat­ion over allegation­s that he authorized paying hush money...

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