The Guardian (USA)

Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro denounced for joining pro-dictatorsh­ip rally

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Former presidents, politician­s and newspaper editorial boards have lined up to denounce the “moronic” and “anti-democratic” behaviour of Brazil’s farright leader after he hit the streets to egg on protesters demanding a return to military dictatorsh­ip.

As the number of deaths caused by Covid-19 rose to nearly 2,500 on Sunday, Jair Bolsonaro left his presidenti­al palace in Brazil’s capital, Brasília, to fraternize with flag-waving radicals.

Among the demands their banners listed were an end to the social distancing measures opposed by Bolsonaro, the closure of Brazil’s congress and supreme court, and a re-run of a dictatorsh­ip-era decree used by military rulers in the late 1960s to suffocate their political opponents.

At one point – snubbing social distancing rules for the umpteenth time since the coronaviru­s crisis began – Brazil’s paratroope­r-turned-president clambered onto a truck to address the hundreds-strong assembly.

“The era of roguery is over. Now it’s the people who are in power,” Bolsonaro proclaimed outside the Brazilian army headquarte­rs, coughing repeatedly as he spoke.

“Everyone in Brazil must understand that they must yield to the will of the Brazilian people.”

Bolsonaro’s outing – which some suspect was a deliberate provocatio­n designed to distract from the rising Covid-19 death toll – sparked immediate censure.

Former president Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who governed from 1995 until 2003, tweeted: “Deplorable for the president to join anti-democratic protests. It’s time to unite around the constituti­on against all threats to democracy.”

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, president from 2003 to 2010, tweeted: “The same constituti­on that allows a president to be democratic­ally elected also contains devices to stop them leading the country to the destructio­n of democracy and a genocide of the population.”

Rodrigo Maia, the head of Brazil’s lower house, said Brazil was in a dual fight against coronaviru­s “and the virus of authoritar­ianism”.

“In total, 2,462 deaths have been recorded in Brazil. Preaching a democratic rupture in the face of these deaths represents an unforgivab­le cruelty to the families of victims,” Maia tweeted. “We don’t have time to waste with coup-mongering bombast.”

Eduardo Paes, Rio de Janeiro’s former mayor, tweeted: “There have always been morons going around ranting against democracy … Generally they’re minorities whose tickles you don’t even feel.”

“[But it’s] something quite different when it’s the president – a democratic­ally elected one – joining this kind of movement. There’s no way to remain quiet and not repudiate added.

The O Globo broadsheet called Bolsonaro’s speech a “dangerous” assault on the democratic rule of law.

Even members of the military top brass were reportedly upset, with one senior official urging citizens to ignore Bolsonaro’s actions. “Let the president talk to the nutters on his lonesome,” they told the news magazine Veja.

On Monday morning Bolsonaro denied he had been attacking Brazilian democracy but told reporters: “I am actually the Constituti­on”.

Bolsonaro is a longstandi­ng fan of this,” Paes

the military men who ruled Brazil from 1964 until 1985, and autocrats including

Chile’s Augusto Pinochet.

Bolsonaro’s reaction to Covid-19 – which he has downplayed as media “hysteria” – has proved similarly controvers­ial. Last week Bolsonaro sacked his popular health minister, Luiz Henrique Mandetta, who had clashed with him for underminin­g health ministry recommenda­tions designed to protect Brazilian lives.

Mandetta’s replacemen­t Nelson Teich made no immediate comment on

Bolsonaro’s decision to flout the same guidelines on Sunday.

 ??  ?? Jair Bolsonaro speaks after joining his supporters who were taking part in a motorcade to protest against quarantine and social distancing measures to combat the coronaviru­s outbreak in Brasilia on Sunday. Photograph: Sergio Lima/AFP via Getty Images
Jair Bolsonaro speaks after joining his supporters who were taking part in a motorcade to protest against quarantine and social distancing measures to combat the coronaviru­s outbreak in Brasilia on Sunday. Photograph: Sergio Lima/AFP via Getty Images
 ??  ?? Jair Bolsonaro coughs as he speaks in Brasilia Sunday. Photograph: Sergio Lima/ AFP via Getty Images
Jair Bolsonaro coughs as he speaks in Brasilia Sunday. Photograph: Sergio Lima/ AFP via Getty Images

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