Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bolsonaro uses medals to celebrate allies, family, himself

- MAURICIO SAVARESE AND DEBORA ALVARES Debora Alvares reported from Brasilia.

“Behaviors like this often correspond to leaders’ fears about their political future, and they start to try and buy people off with honors and other things to keep their loyalty.”

— Ruth Ben-Guiat, a specialist on authoritar­ian leaders at New York University

SAO PAULO — Elon Musk arrived in Brazil for his first-ever visit, not knowing his cachaca from his churrasco, and within hours had a prestigiou­s medal draped around his neck as he clasped the hand of President Jair Bolsonaro.

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO was the first foreign civilian without a government position to receive the Defense Ministry honor since its 2002 creation, according to an Associated Press review of recent records.

But it came as little surprise given Bolsonaro’s benevolenc­e in decorating ideologica­l allies, ministers, loyalists and family — sometimes on questioned grounds.

Bolsonaro himself has received six medals from his own administra­tion.

In Bolsonaro’s cabinet, a medal has practicall­y come with the job. The nation’s three medals regarded as most prestigiou­s are the Order of Defense Merit, Order of Rio Branco and the Medal of Victory, and Bolsonaro awarded more than three-quarters of current or former ministers at least one.

He has distribute­d at least 76 of the three top medals to ministers since 2019, more than any of his three elected predecesso­rs throughout their two terms.

Bolsonaro also gave three medals of various sorts to his wife Michelle and senator son Flavio.

His son Eduardo, a lawmaker, got at least six.

The awards are meant “to forge the appearance of being surrounded by people with merit, of high caliber,” said Carlos Melo, a political science professor at Insper University.

“One or another could be, but you can’t say that for all of them.”

In a November article titled “The Farce of the Medals,” magazine Istoe wrote that Bolsonaro had transforme­d the government into a medal dispensary.

The presidenti­al palace didn’t respond to AP questions about motives for the medals.

Heads of state often bestow awards on controvers­ial grounds. Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner received Mexico’s highest honor, the Order of the Aztec Eagle, for helping to renegotiat­e the North American trade agreement.

Barack Obama gave out more Presidenti­al Medals of Freedom than any U.S. leader since its creation, including one for billionair­e Warren Buffett and another for then-Vice President Joe Biden.

But it’s rarer for presidents to decorate themselves. The same medal the Defense Ministry awarded to Musk was given to Bolsonaro on his first day in office, Jan. 1, 2019.

The former army captain has accumulate­d others of varying importance in the three years since, mostly from the armed forces.

In March, he got two medals from his Justice Ministry, one of which honors altruistic service for Indigenous peoples.

That scandalize­d environmen­talists, human rights activists and Indigenous groups who see the president’s push for developmen­t within Indigenous territorie­s as profoundly damaging.

Veteran ethnograph­er Sydney Possuelo, who once headed the nation’s Indigenous agency and demarcated Indigenous territorie­s nationwide, was shocked when he heard the news. He protested by returning his own medal, which he received 35 years prior.

“If I’d seen it the same day, I would have rushed down and thrown the medal at the entry of the presidenti­al palace,” Possuelo, 83, told the AP by phone.

“How can a president who promises to ignore a Supreme Court ruling on demarcatio­n of Indigenous lands give himself that accolade?”

There aren’t public records to show whether former presidents received as many medals from their own administra­tions. The AP filed freedom of informatio­n requests to the president’s office and several ministries for year-by-year informatio­n on medals awarded since the country’s 1988 return to democracy but received scant response.

Former Presidents Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Fernando Henrique Cardoso accepted the same medal as Musk while in office. Dilma Rousseff won it before her election, while a minister. The medal was created in 2002, replacing a similar honor.

Jose Chrispinia­no, the spokespers­on for da Silva, said his boss “doesn’t have the slightest idea” how many medals he received from his own government.

“He never cared much about that,” the spokespers­on said. Da Silva leads all polls to win October elections, in which Bolsonaro is seeking a second term.

History Professor Ruth Ben-Guiat, a specialist on authoritar­ian leaders at New York University, said she wasn’t aware of other presidents receiving so many medals from their own administra­tions.

“Behaviors like this often correspond to leaders’ fears about their political future, and they start to try and buy people off with honors and other things to keep their loyalty,” she said by email.

“I would imagine that these behaviors will increase as the election gets closer.”

In at least one instance, Bolsonaro overruled expert recommenda­tions on granting awards, cutting two scientists from a technical committee’s list of recipients: One had worked on improving health of transgende­r people and the other published a study showing the anti-malarial drug chloroquin­e was ineffectiv­e against covid-19.

Bolsonaro had insistentl­y touted it as a cure.

The Brazilian Academy of Sciences issued a statement calling the snub “unpreceden­ted in the country and typical of authoritar­ian regimes.”

And 21 other intended recipients refused the accolade, long seen as a major profession­al honor. Among them was Carlos Gustavo Moreira, a member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences.

“His interventi­on was a step beyond,” said Moreira. “Many of us were uncomforta­ble receiving it from this administra­tion. After he took the two names off, it was easy to decide.”

Bolsonaro didn’t make explicit why Musk got the Defense Ministry medal, but within days SpaceX launched two satellites for the Brazilian Air Force from Cape Canaveral.

At the event in Brazil’s countrysid­e, Bolsonaro said the billionair­e’s plans to conduct satellite monitoring of the Amazon rain forest would debunk lies about environmen­tal destructio­n, called his prospectiv­e purchase of Twitter a “breath of hope” and deemed the man “the legend of freedom.”

Many of Bolsonaro’s boosters view Musk as a champion against social media speech restrictio­ns.

“Bolsonaro supporters want to see him give a medal to someone they believe is in favor of what they call liberty, freedom of speech,” Joao Martins Filho, former head of the Brazilian Associatio­n of Defense Studies, told the AP by phone.

“So he gladly does it.”

 ?? (File Photo/AP/Andre Borges) ?? Bolsonaro (right) raises the arm of his son Eduardo Bolsonaro on May 17, 2020, during a protest in Brasilia.
(File Photo/AP/Andre Borges) Bolsonaro (right) raises the arm of his son Eduardo Bolsonaro on May 17, 2020, during a protest in Brasilia.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Eraldo Peres) ?? Bolsonaro receives the Maua Merit Medal for services to the national infrastruc­ture Aug. 15, 2019, in Brasilia, Brazil.
(File Photo/AP/Eraldo Peres) Bolsonaro receives the Maua Merit Medal for services to the national infrastruc­ture Aug. 15, 2019, in Brasilia, Brazil.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Eraldo Peres) ?? Veteran ethnograph­er Sydney Possuelo, seen May 30 in his apartment in Brasilia, once headed the nation’s Indigenous agency and was shocked when he heard Bolsonaro received the Medal of Indigenous Merit. He protested by returning his own medal, which he received 35 years prior.
(File Photo/AP/Eraldo Peres) Veteran ethnograph­er Sydney Possuelo, seen May 30 in his apartment in Brasilia, once headed the nation’s Indigenous agency and was shocked when he heard Bolsonaro received the Medal of Indigenous Merit. He protested by returning his own medal, which he received 35 years prior.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Eraldo Peres) ?? Bolsonaro, wearing a traditiona­l Paresi Indigenous headdress, leaves March 18 after participat­ing in a ceremony where he was decorated with the Medal of Indigenous merit at the Ministry of Justice in Brasilia.
(File Photo/AP/Eraldo Peres) Bolsonaro, wearing a traditiona­l Paresi Indigenous headdress, leaves March 18 after participat­ing in a ceremony where he was decorated with the Medal of Indigenous merit at the Ministry of Justice in Brasilia.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Eraldo Peres) ?? Bolsonaro (left) honors his Environmen­t Minister Ricardo Salles on Oct. 22, 2020, with the Order of Rio Branco, the nation’s highest diplomacy award, during a ceremony at the Itamaraty Palace in Brasilia.
(File Photo/AP/Eraldo Peres) Bolsonaro (left) honors his Environmen­t Minister Ricardo Salles on Oct. 22, 2020, with the Order of Rio Branco, the nation’s highest diplomacy award, during a ceremony at the Itamaraty Palace in Brasilia.
 ?? ?? This handout photo provided by Brazil’s Ministry of Communicat­ions shows Tesla and SpaceX chief executive officer Elon Musk (right) wearing the Defense Order of Merit medal May 20 as he shakes hands with Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro in Porto Feliz, Brazil. Musk is the first foreign civilian without a government position to receive the Brazilian Defense Ministry honor since its creation. (File Photo/AP/Brazil Ministry of Communicat­ions/Cleverson Oliveira)
This handout photo provided by Brazil’s Ministry of Communicat­ions shows Tesla and SpaceX chief executive officer Elon Musk (right) wearing the Defense Order of Merit medal May 20 as he shakes hands with Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro in Porto Feliz, Brazil. Musk is the first foreign civilian without a government position to receive the Brazilian Defense Ministry honor since its creation. (File Photo/AP/Brazil Ministry of Communicat­ions/Cleverson Oliveira)

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