Lula's detention intensifies pressure on Brazil's ruling party (March 6, 2016)
Police on Friday detained former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva for three hours, in relation to the ever widening investigation into a massive bid-rigging-and bribery ring corruption scheme at the state-owned oil company Petrobras. (See Friday's second post.)
Prosecutors believe that da Silva profited from the billions that were skimmed from Petrobras, and gave benefits to other politicians as well. They point to renovations made to a beachside penthouse and a sprawling country estate by two construction companies implicated in the investigation, reports the Wall Street Journal.
Prosecutors on Friday described the former president as spearheading a years long scheme to divert money from Petrobras to fund election campaigns for his leftist Workers’ Party and its allies, according to the WSJ. The piece quotes Brian Winter, vice-president of Americas Society/Council of The Americas, who says the moment "signals a completely new moment for the Petrobras probe and for the Workers’ Party and for Brazil generally."
Friday's actions represent Phase 24 of the "Operation Car Wash" investigation, reports Folha de S. Paulo. The piece has more details on the accusations against the former president.
Following his release by police on Friday, Lula (as he is known in Brazil) went on a rant and questioned the political motivation of investigators. He said Brazil's elites feel threatened because he lifted millions out of poverty and that he's ready to travel the country to defend his government’s accomplishments, reports the Wall Street Journal separately.
"I'm indignant about this process. If the police find I've taken a (cent), I don't deserve to be in this party," he told supports at a press conference at the Workers' Party headquarters in São Paulo.
Supporters in Brazil point to an establishment and media bias against Lula, while Horacio Verbitsky in Argentina links the temporary detention of Lula with that of a former girlfriend of Bolivian President Evo Morales, the arrest of social movement leader Milagro Salas in Argentina and the investigation into Chilean President Michelle Bachelet's daughter-in-law. All are part of a a witch hunt against the populist leaders responsible for the social transformation of the region, he argues in Página 12.
Senior judges in Brazil, including one who believes the Workers' Party did use graft funds for electoral campaigns, criticized the detention of Lula, reports Reuters. Supreme court justice Marco Aurélio Mello said that "nothing justified the use of force" when police picked up Lula unannounced from his apartment. And justice Gilmar Mendes, called Lula’s interrogation in police custody a "delicate" situation.
But it seems likely that pressure on President Dilma Rousseff and Lula, as well as the governing Workers' Party, will continue to grow, notes Reuters.
The intensifying scandal will only further complicate the situation for Rousseff, Lula's successor, who is facing impeachment proceedings unrelated to the case.
Today she called Lula's detention unnecessary and blamed the country's political crisis on her opponents for not accepting their defeat in the 2014 elections and wanting to bring forward new elections scheduled for 2018, reports Reuters.
A friend of Lula arrested in November for allegedly taking out a fraudulent loan to the Workers' Party is negotiating a plea bargain deal with prosecutors, reports Reuters today. Jose Carlos Bumlai, a powerful rancher who also controlled a sugar mill, has discussed a potential collaboration with Brazilian investigators over the past two weeks, according to Brazilian media.
Opposition lawmakers said on Friday they will block congressional voting until the supreme court clears the way for the impeachment process against Rousseff.
The case has the country divided, and protesters battled outside of Lula's home this weekend, reports CBC. Hundreds of supporters held a daylight vigil outside in support of the former president, and Rousseff visited him on Saturday, reports Bloomberg.
Tempers are heating up in Brazil. This weekend PT headquarters were vandalized repeatedly, as were Lula's foundation offices, reports the Buenos Aires Herald. Small protests from both sides (in favor and against the government) occurred over the weekend.
Confused by the apparently eternal and impossible to contain "Operation Car Wash" investigation into corruption Petrobras? The New York Times has a helpful (though simplified) guide to the political and economic turmoil in Brazil. WSJ has a timeline looking at the main events in the two year investigation.
News Briefs
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