Bangkok Post

Ex-leader Silva falls prey to graft probe

Working class hero decries ‘witch hunt’

-

RIO DE JANEIRO: The former president who brought Brazil to prominence on the world stage has been found guilty of corruption and money laundering — a historic judgement underscori­ng that no one is out of reach of this Latin American country’s sprawling graft investigat­ion.

Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s conviction on Wednesday was the highest-profile victory yet for the probe, which has already brought charges against dozens of political and business elite and recovered more than US$3 billion in illgotten gains.

While Judge Sergio Moro defended the decision as one based purely in the law, Silva derided the trial as a political witch hunt and is expected to rally his supporters to his cause with a news conference scheduled for yesterday.

Brazil’s first working-class president, sentenced to nearly 10 years in prison, will remain free while an appeal is heard, but he is now the country’s first former president to be convicted in a criminal proceeding at least since democracy was restored in the 1980s.

Meanwhile, the current president, Michel Temer, is facing his own corruption charge.

“It’s very unusual to have a former president convicted of corruption and at the time same a sitting president also being investigat­ed,” said Sergio Praca, a political scientist at the Fundacao Getulio Vargas university in Rio de Janeiro. “Today is a huge moment in Brazilian history, for better or worse.”

Brazilians have lived through three tumultuous years as the ever-spreading “Operation Car Wash” investigat­ion has revealed corruption on a scale that has shocked even the most cynical. At the same time, Dilma Rousseff was impeached and removed from office for illegally managing the federal budget. And now her successor, Mr Temer, is under siege as the lower house of Congress decides whether he should be suspended and put on trial.

The probe initially focused on members of Silva’s Workers’ Party, but it has since brought charges of wrongdoing against politician­s of all stripes, feeding anger against those at the top as Brazil’s struggles with its worst economic slump in decades. Brazilians are frequently in the streets, either to voice support for politician­s they feel are being unfairly attacked or to back the prosecutor­s and judges who are investigat­ing them.

Traditiona­lly, no one has been better at drawing a crowd than Silva.

“He will try to mobilise his crowd, his group, but I don’t think he’s noticed that the times have changed, that the battle is not fought on the streets,” said Mr Praca. “People are just plain tired of everything.

A few hundred Silva supporters did protest his conviction in Sao Paulo on Wednesday night, and a somewhat smaller group was also out to cheer Judge Moro’s decision.

The charismati­c leader left office at the end of 2010 with sky-high popularity, after riding an economic boom to fund social programs that pulled millions of Brazilians out of poverty and expanding the internatio­nal role of Latin America’s biggest nation.

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 verdict, 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.

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 Judge Moro dismissed that part of the case.

Silva also faces charges in four other cases. He denies any wrongdoing.

Judge 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.

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 9 1/2 years in prison, Moro also ruled that the politician should be barred from public office for 19 years.

 ?? EPA ?? Demonstrat­ors celebrate the sentencing of former Brazilian president Lula da Silva to nine and a half years in prison, in Sao Paulo, on Wednesday.
EPA Demonstrat­ors celebrate the sentencing of former Brazilian president Lula da Silva to nine and a half years in prison, in Sao Paulo, on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Silva: First working class president
Silva: First working class president

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand