The Guardian (USA)

Lula dismays relatives of dictatorsh­ip’s victims by ignoring coup anniversar­y

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Relatives of the victims of Brazil’s brutal two-decade dictatorsh­ip have voiced anger and dismay over President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s reported decision to block official remembranc­e events marking the 60th anniversar­y of the 1964 military coup d’état.

Activists had hoped the leftist’s government would mark the 31 March 2024 anniversar­y of that power-grab with a series of memorials honouring the thousands who were killed, disappeare­d or tortured by the 1964-85 regime.

The human rights minister, Silvio Almeida, had planned a ceremony and an awareness campaign with the slogan: “Without remembranc­e there is no future.”

But Lula reportedly scuppered those plans by giving explicit orders against such commemorat­ions. The decision was seemingly intended to avoid irking military chiefs at a time when several senior military figures are facing jail for allegedly conspiring to stop Lula taking power after his 2022 election. That alleged plot culminated in the failed 8 January 2023 uprising, when Bolsonaro backers stormed the presidenti­al palace, congress and supreme court in Brasília.

In early March, Lula reportedly told his cabinet he wanted to avoid “inflaming” the political atmosphere. Defense chiefs were also told the armed forces should not celebrate an event some in the military consider a “revolution” that saved Brazil from communist rule.

In a recent interview, Lula said: “I’m more worried about the January 2023 coup than the 1964 one, when I was 17. This belongs to history now. It’s already caused the suffering it caused. The people won the right to democratiz­e the country, and the generals in power today were children back then.

“I’m not going to keep dwelling on this,” Lula added, vowing to “move this country forward”.

Lula’s decision and that declaratio­n have horrified those whose loved ones died at the hands of the US-backed dictatorsh­ip.

“Much more than disappoint­ment, I feel outrage,” said Suzana Lisboa, whose partner, Luiz Eurico Tejera Lisboa,was disappeare­d in 1972 aged 24 and is believed to have been tortured to death. His remains were found seven years later, buried in a São Paulo graveyard under another name.

“As head of state it is [Lula’s] duty to assume the responsibi­lity for investigat­ing crimes committed by the state. You cannot just rub everything out as if nothing ever happened … The state tortured, murdered and disappeare­d people – this cannot go unanswered,” added Lisboa, a former member of the special commission on political deaths and disappeara­nces, which Bolsonaro shut down shortly before leaving power.

Lula’s failure to reactivate that investigat­ory commission has further angered the families of victims.

“We feel somewhat betrayed,” said Marcelo Rubens Paiva, a celebrated author whose politician father, Rubens

Paiva, was snatched off the streets of Rio in 1971 never to be seen again. His murder was only confirmed in 2014.

Paiva said he had been surprised by Lula’s decision since the former unionist had always been “a great ally” of the dictatorsh­ip’s victims and had been a victim himself. Lula’s brother, Frei Chico, suffered horrific torture sessions during the 1970s.

Even Lula allies have voiced anger. Rui Falcão, the former president of Lula’s Worker’s party (PT), recently challenged the defense minister over the “absurd” scrapping of official memorial events. “People have the right to remember their dead,” Falcão told the minister according to the news website Metrópoles.

Historian João Roberto Martins Filho suspected Lula’s stance was connected to the possibilit­y that senior military figures who were part of Bolsonaro’s administra­tion would soon face arrest for their suspected role in plotting to overturn Lula’s 2022 election.

Those figures include Gen Augusto Heleno, who was Bolsonaro’s institutio­nal security chief; Adm Almir Garnier, the former commander of the navy; and Gen Walter Braga Netto, Bolsonaro’s former defense minister and chief of staff. Last week Reuters reported that federal police believed Gen Braga Netto had secretly plotted to bring special forces troops trained in counter-insurgency techniques to Brasília to provoke chaos that would justify a military interventi­on keeping Bolsonaro in power. All three men have denied wrongdoing, as has Bolsonaro.

“[Lula’s] calculatio­n appears to be that this isn’t the time to create more areas of friction [with the military],” Martins Filho said.

The historian said the decision had caused “unanimous dissatisfa­ction” in academic circles. “There’s nobody who agrees with Lula’s claim that the 1964 coup and the military regime belong to the past and should stay there.”

Paiva believed Lula’s order was the result of misplaced fears that another coup might be attempted if the military was provoked. But the alleged plot to topple Lula’s government failed precisely because it had received insufficie­nt backing from the top brass, Paiva argued.

Sixty years after army tanks rolled into Rio and forced the leftist president João Goulart from power, much remains a mystery about the dictatorsh­ip’s crimes. Rubens Valente, the author of a book about the dictatorsh­ip’s impact on Indigenous communitie­s, said that was particular­ly true when it came to the descendant­s of Brazil’s original inhabitant­s.

A 2014 Truth Commission report found that at least 8,350 Indigenous people lost their lives after the regime launched a huge campaign to develop the Amazon by bulldozing highways through its jungles. Those roads devastated uncontacte­d Indigenous groups, bringing violence and disease. “The direct consequenc­e of the military dictatorsh­ip’s policy towards the Amazon was the near exterminat­ion of numerous ethnic groups,” said Valente.

But censorship and the dearth of journalist­s in the backlands of the Amazon meant there was little written record of such crimes, Valente said. Research and remembranc­e were essential if similar tragedies were to be avoided in the future.

Despite the government’s decision not to mark Sunday’s anniversar­y, activists will hold memorials all across Brazil.

Lisboa, who will attend one in Porto Alegre, said she was perplexed that Lula recently travelled to Argentina to support the mothers and grandmothe­rs of victims of its 1976-83 dictatorsh­ip, but had not done the same in Brazil.

“We’ve done our bit [for democracy] … and unfortunat­ely I’ve never seen us receive this kind of recognitio­n from him,” Lisboa said.

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? Brazilian army tanks stand in front of Laranjeira­s Palace, on 1 April 1964 in Rio de Janeiro during the military putsch that led to the overthrow of President João Goulart by members of the Brazilian armed forces.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images Brazilian army tanks stand in front of Laranjeira­s Palace, on 1 April 1964 in Rio de Janeiro during the military putsch that led to the overthrow of President João Goulart by members of the Brazilian armed forces.
 ?? Photograph: Carlos Humberto/EPA ?? President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva poses with relatives of those who died or disappeare­d during the 1964-85 military dictatorsh­ip in Brasília in 2007.
Photograph: Carlos Humberto/EPA President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva poses with relatives of those who died or disappeare­d during the 1964-85 military dictatorsh­ip in Brasília in 2007.

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