Business Day

Bolsonaro aide shrugs off warnings as coronaviru­s spreads in Brazil

• Group of 22 of Brazilian elite have disease after two days of mingling

- Lisandra Paraguassu and Anthony Boadle Brasilia

Augusto Heleno, a national security adviser to Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro, treated Tuesday March 17 much like any other work day.

The 72-year-old former army general attended cabinet meetings in the capital of Brasília, embraced colleagues and visited the cafeteria in the presidenti­al palace, according to people familiar with his activities. But there was an unusual piece of business pending: he was awaiting the results of a coronaviru­s test.

The following day, the test came back positive. Heleno announced it on Twitter. “I am in isolation at home and will not take telephone calls,” he posted. He said he had no fever or other symptoms.

Heleno is now one of nearly two dozen confirmed coronaviru­s cases that have surfaced among Brazilians who travelled to Florida earlier in March to hobnob with US officials. Bolsonaro and senior aides met with President Donald Trump at his Mar-aLago resort in Palm Beach, while a larger contingent gathered with legislator­s and business leaders at a Miami hotel and other events.

At least 22 Brazilians who made the journey have confirmed they have tested positive, through public statements or social media accounts. They include two business leaders, a senator, a congressma­n, two members of Bolsonaro’s cabinet, his chief bodyguard, his head of protocol and a top foreign affairs adviser.

Contagion among Brazil’s political elite, health experts said, is a warning about the country’s lack of readiness to combat the pandemic.

Bolsonaro, 65, who tested negative, has, for weeks, described the coronaviru­s as “a little flu”. He recently asked Congress to declare a state of emergency to free up more funding. Still, he has resisted calling for Brazilians to stay at home and for businesses to close because of concerns about harming the economy. And he has berated Brazilian governors and mayors who have taken such steps, even as some members of his inner circle have fallen ill.

Bolsonaro, his son Eduardo, security adviser Heleno and two other ministers dined with Trump on Saturday March 7, as cases were rising sharply in the US. They huddled with Trump and vice-president Mike Pence to take photos. One showed the US president holding a cap that said, “Make Brazil Great Again”.

The larger group of

Brazilians attended meetings the following two days with investors, business people and public officials, including Miami mayor Francis Suarez, who announced on March 13 that he had tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

“We caught it on that trip to Miami, in close contact with one another on the same planes, shuttle buses and hotel meeting rooms,” said Brazilian congressma­n Daniel Freitas, 37, who tested positive on his return. He is now in quarantine in his Brasília apartment.

Brazilian doctors have not establishe­d a definitive transmissi­on chain and cannot say for certain whether the group was infected in the US.

Fabio Wajngarten, Bolsonaro’s communicat­ions secretary, tested positive for the coronaviru­s on March 12, two days after arriving home from Florida. Testing then started for other members of the delegation. Bolsonaro and Heleno were among those who continued to circulate in public while awaiting their results, much to the dismay of Brazil’s medical community.

“It is behaviour like an ostrich that sticks its head in the sand,” said epidemiolo­gist José Cássio de Moraes, a member of Abrasco, Brazil’s largest associatio­n of public-health experts, doctors and researcher­s. “It’s not acceptable in any form,” he said.

Heleno did not respond to a request for comment, and neither did Bolsonaro’s office.

Brazil’s federal response to the pandemic has lagged that of other South American countries, even as it leads the continent in confirmed cases of Covid-19. As of Tuesday, Brazil had recorded about 1,950 cases, an eightfold increase in a week, with 34 deaths tied to the virus, according to the latest health ministry figures.

The country trailed several of its neighbours in tightening its land borders. Bolsonaro’s administra­tion waited until March 17 to ask Congress to declare the state of emergency. Brazil, like the US and other late-movers, is now scrambling to produce millions of test kits.

State governors and mayors, meanwhile, have taken the lead in closing public venues and asking Brazilians to stay at home. Many private-sector companies have directed employees to work remotely.

Bolsonaro has criticised such measures as “extreme”. He has called on Brazilians to fight the disease without bringing the economy to a halt. He recently shook hands with a throng of supporters and leaned into the crowd for selfies. He said in a Friday television interview that churches should keep holding services. Bolsonaro rose to power with huge support from evangelica­l Christians due to his conservati­ve social agenda.

Health minister Luiz Henrique Mandetta has warned that Brazil’s health-care system could collapse in April under a surge of patients with Covid-19 if Brazilians do not adopt rigorous social distancing. Last week he compared Bolsonaro’s mingling with crowds to a smoker ignoring tobacco warnings.

In the halls of Congress, nervous legislator­s have rushed to protect themselves. Many have fled Brasília to their districts, or are working remotely from their apartments in the capital.

In-person committee hearings have been scrapped and moved online. Plenary sessions cannot have more than 30 legislator­s on the floor, and traditiona­l huddles to discuss legislatio­n are discourage­d in both chambers.

“Please keep your distance from one another,” chamber of deputies speaker Rodrigo Maia reminded colleagues over the loudspeake­r during Wednesday’s session as they quickly approved the state of emergency.

Bolsonaro’s approval ratings have taken a beating. A survey published by the Datafolha polling firm on Monday showed that just 34% of Brazilians polled thought the president’s job performanc­e was “great” or “good”. That is the lowest level since he took office in 2019.

Residents of São Paulo, Rio and Brasília have taken to banging on pots and pans at their windows and balconies, shouting “Bolsonaro Out!”

The president has brushed off the protests. “This is not the time for political disputes ... to blame me for everything that happens,” he told reporters on Friday. “I am not worried about the pots and pans. I am worried about coronaviru­s.”

Back at the presidenti­al palace, bottles of hand sanitiser have appeared throughout the building, while pregnant and elderly staff are now working from home, people familiar with the situation told Reuters.

Bolsonaro has begun holding daily coronaviru­s meetings, according to a presidenti­al staffer.

BOLSONARO AND HELENO CONTINUING TO CIRCULATE IS LIKE AN OSTRICH THAT STICKS ITS HEAD IN THE SAND ... IT’S NOT ACCEPTABLE

 ?? /Reuters ?? Fallen general:
Augusto Heleno tweeted that he was in isolation at home and not taking phone calls.
/Reuters Fallen general: Augusto Heleno tweeted that he was in isolation at home and not taking phone calls.

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