Brazil

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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Sat Jun 02, 2018 1:08 pm

Beyond the restitution of law as ex-president to Lula

The measure was handed down by Judge André Nabarrete Neto, who revoked the decision of his counterpart Haroldo Nader to deprive the Brazilian ex-claimant of his rights.

Author: International Writing | international@granma.cu

May 31, 2018 21:05:31

Image
Support for Lula has had a massive character. Photo: TELESUR
Sao Paulo. - The Federal Regional Court of the Third Region (TRF3) ordered on Tuesday the restitution of his rights as former president to the Brazilian leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, after a judge decided to revoke them on May 17.

The measure was dictated by Judge André Nabarrete Neto, who indicated in his decision that the Brazilian exmandatarios are granted "rights and privileges (and not benefits) derived from the exercise of the highest office of the Republic and that they do not find any legal limitations »

Remember that these rights were removed earlier this month by Judge Haroldo Nader when he stated that, since Lula remains in prison, he can not make use of them, Telesur reported.

However, the law stipulates that all former heads of state have certain rights, for life, for having held the highest office in the South American nation.

"The explicit normative acts guarantee to the presidents not only the personal security, but also the personal support and the patrimonial security, so that the servants of their trust are necessary for the maintenance of their dignity and subsistence", the magistrate specified. decision.

Thus, the justice of second instance overthrew the decision of Judge Harold Nader, who on May 17 ordered the immediate withdrawal of services to which Lula is entitled, on the grounds that there could be a "deviation of purpose".

It is worth mentioning that all Brazilian presidents are entitled, by law and for life, to a team of eight people paid with the budget of the presidential cabinet.

Lula is in prison since April 7 at the Superintendence of the Federal Police of Curitiba, where he is serving a sentence of 12 years and one month for alleged corruption and money laundering crimes, which has not been proven.

Beyond this restituted condition, by a simple exercise of right, who is the candidate of the Workers' Party for the general elections of October, for which part as a favorite, continues in prison as a result of a rigged process. (International Writing)

WHAT CRIME COMETIÓ LULA
-Help a platform that has given voice to the union movements and the struggle for their rights.

- Win in 2002 the presidential elections representing pt, and become the most voted leader in the history of Brazil.

- His second term was 80% approved, 7.5% economic growth and a minimum salary 54% higher than his first government.

- Remove more than 30 million Brazilians from poverty, reduce the unemployment rate and place their country on the map of emerging powers.

-Inspire the largest country in Latin America and the Caribbean and project an image of order and progress, just as you can see in your flag.

http://www.granma.cu/mundo/2018-05-31/m ... 8-21-05-31

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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Mon Jun 04, 2018 1:46 pm

Inside the Gringo Oil Grab: Parente leaves, Petrobras hikes prices

unions claim partial victory as top PSDB insider and Shell executive resign from Petrobras leadership

by Brian Mier

On May 30th, as a trucker’s strike that paralyzed the country for 9 days began to wind down, Brazilian petroleum workers initiated a 3 day, nationwide “warning strike.” Their demands were: 1) the immediate firing of Royal Dutch Shell Corporation insider, José Alberto de Paula Torres Lima, from the Petrobras Board of Directors; 2) the firing of Petrobras President Pedro Parente; 3) the reversal of Parente’s disastrous pricing policy which caused cooking gas, diesel and gasoline prices to rise by over 50% in less than a year; and 4) a halt to Parente’s dismantlement of the company and undervalued sale of its assets.

Hours after the strike began, Lima resigned. The next day, as a judge threatened the unions with a R$2million/day fine per demonstration, they agreed to return to work if Parente resigned, and announced that another strike would take place in June if the rest of their demands were not met. Parente stepped down, but the pricing policy remains intact – they have already risen fuel prices by 2.25% since he left. As the conservative Brazilian media, led by Globo, gave him the hero treatment, he said, “I’m leaving because I accomplished everything I promised.”

For the past 25 years Pedro Parente has been a top power broker within the inappropriately-named, center-right Partido da Social Democracia Brasileira (Brazilian Social Democracy Party/PSDB). A former IMF official, as Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s Minister of Mines and Energy and Chief of Staff he oversaw privatization of the state mining company Vale do Rio Doce and large sectors of the Brazilian electrical grid, which culminated in 7 months of blackouts in 2001 and 2002. The scandal critically wounded the PSDB party in the eyes of the Brazilian public and it has never won a presidential election since.

Immediately after the 2016 coup, Michel Temer nominated Parente as Petrobras president as part of his power sharing deal with the PSDB and he immediately began dismantling the company. He cut production in Petrobras refineries by 30%, unnecessarily increased petroleum derivative imports, and linked the national price for gasoline, diesel and cooking gas to international market prices with daily price adjustments, abandoning the previous government’s policy of price stabilization as a national development tool. Within 10 months, Petrobras increased fuel prices over 200 times. Prices for gasoline and diesel rose by over 50%. Cooking gas rose by 60% and, during a time when extreme poverty increased by 11%, 1.2 million families were forced to abandon the use of gas and start scavenging for and burning scrap wood to meet their cooking needs.

In order to understand the scope of the damage the dismantlement and neoliberal pricing policy has caused, it is important to understand the role Petrobras, the mixed capital, state controlled Petroleum company, played in Brazilian society before the 2016 coup and why international capital would be so interested in its privatization. After discovery of the massive pre-salt offshore petroleum reserves was announced in 2006, promising to catapult Brazil to the position of one of the world’s largest producers, the US government began illegally spying on the company. Shortly thereafter, the US DOJ and FBI initiated a partnership with the Brazilian prosecutors office and judiciary to investigate the company for corruption. From 2014 forewords, the Northern commercial media, which receives millions in advertising funding from petroleum multinationals, worked to build a narrative that Petrobras was one of the most corrupt companies in the World. To be frank, this would not sound like much of a stretch to the average reader because the extractive industry, including petroleum, generally is considered to be the most corupt industry in the world. Like in most extractive industry companies, there have been massive bribery, fraud and kickback scandals going on inside Petrobras since it was founded. Whereas there is no evidence that this level of corruption increased during the PT governments, they certainly could have done more to combat it. However, as corrupt as Petrobras has been –and billions of dollars in bribes have certainly changed hands over the last 65 years – it cannot be put in the same category as the major private sector petroleum corporations who’s post-coup takeover of Brazil’s offshore oil reserves proceeds with no criticism from the same northern papers that spent years attacking Petrobras. Unlike the largest private sector petroleum corporations, Petrobras never lobbied to start a $2 trillion war that killed hundreds of thousands in Iraq (BP), caused $61 billion in environmental damage to the Gulf of Mexico (BP), has never been accused by Amnesty International of complicity in the murder, rape and torture of thousands of people in the Niger Delta region (Shell) or hired Edelman PR company to run an international climate change misinformation campaign to mask its refinaries’ effects on global warming (Chevron). Furthermore, although petroleum is a filthy industry that is destroying the world’s environment, Petrobras is also the world’s largest alternative energy company. During the 1970s, when the dictatorship decided that Brazil should be self sufficient in energy, Petrobras developed the first, large scale production and distribution system for sugar cane-based ethanol fuel which, although not without faults, emits only 14% of the carbon dioxide emissions of petroleum. Since then regular Brazilian gasoline has contained 20-25% ethanol and consumers have had the option of buying cars that run on gasoline, alcohol or both, with alcohol sales surpasing gasoline in Brazil in 2008. Furthermore, thanks to Petrobras, Brazil also has one of the world’s largest natural gas powered auto and bus fleets.

Unlike, for example, Shell or Chevron, with their comparatively small corporate social responsibility departments which fund paternalistic charities in the areas around where their plants are located, Petrobras has a history of funding truly transformative social programs nation-wide that have improved the lives of millions of people in Brazil. I witnessed this first hand while working with the Redes NGO in Rio de Janeiro’s Complexo da Maré favela on a series of projects between 2006-2012. Redes is one of the world’s best NGOs, and during this period, Petrobras was funding them to run extra-curricular activities, after school programs and homework tutoring in 7 schools within the favela as well as providing vocational training to local teenagers and hiring them in their refinery. With support from Petrobras, Redes helped over 1000, primarily Afro-Brazilian local youth pass free public university entrance exams and enroll. This is just one anecdotal example of the type of projects it funded around the country. On broader terms, in 2013-2014, through a transparent, public bidding process, Petrobras spent around $100 million USD on social and environmental projects and a similar amount on the arts. And in 2013, Dilma Rousseff passed a law earmarking 75% of Petrobras’ royalties for the public education system and 25% for the public health system. The massive increases that this law promised were put on hold after the coup in 2016, when the Temer government started selling the offshore reserves at below market rates to foreign companies and passed a constitutional ammendment freezing health and education spending for 20 years.

Due to its strategic importance for national development and sovereignty coupled with its social commitment to the Brazilian people as a publicly owned company, when the corruption scandal broke Petrobras should have been treated as too big to fail. As the US government did with Goldman Sachs, corrupt executives should have been arrested while the government did everything possible to guarantee that the company could continue operating at full capacity and maintain employment levels. Instead, as the Brazilian and Northern media did everything it could to connect Petrobras to non-existent corruption charges against Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Dilma Rousseff, Pedro Parente and his cronies silently began dismantling the company and selling off its assets at, as we say in Brazil, the “price of bananas”.

The results of this criminal dismantling of national patrimony are manifest in the current crisis, with truckers and petroleum workers threatening further strikes this month. As the damage caused by privatizing Petrobras plays out, the Petroleum industry-funded northern media and think thanks are doing what they can to obfuscate the issue, focusing on consequences of the crisis, such as a moderate rise in fascism, instead of addressing its root cause.

http://www.brasilwire.com/inside-the-gr ... es-prices/
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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Tue Jun 05, 2018 5:10 pm

Oil Industry, not Brazilians, Spooked by Strike
ECONOMY PETROBRAS POLITICS SOVEREIGNTY
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Brazilians do not scare easily, but a media narrative saying so paves the way for northern acceptance of a return to fascism.

by Brian Mier

In the seminal book, Manufacturing Consent, Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman depict the commercial media as “powerful ideological institutions that carry out a system-supportive propaganda function, by reliance on market forces, internalized assumptions, and self censorship, and without overt coercion”. In Brazil, we witnessed the propaganda function in 2014, when, during an election year, the northern media transformed its image of the nation from winner country to failed state. A key example was Simon Romero’s New York Times piece From Boom to Rust which was accompanied by a dozen black and white photos of sad looking people in front of unfinished construction projects, most of which were eventually completed. Once in place, this narrative shifted to the subsequently debunked story, repeated ad nauseam, that Dilma Rousseff and Lula received millions of dollars in bribes from the Petrobras Petroleum corporation. Then there was the 2016 narrative that Dilma Rousseff’s illegal impeachment was not a coup, especially disappointing to hear from so-called progressive publications like the New York Times and Guardian, since progressive Brazilians unanimously believe that it was.

After truckers and petroleum workers anti-privatization strikes ground the nation to a halt last week, an article sprung up on the social media, shared by some people who should know better, in which corporate pitch man Brian Winter compares the strikes to a zombie apocalypse and justifies the fact that many (but not most) Brazilians are clamoring for a return to military rule because they are “scared”. The cognitive effect of associating the strike with a zombie apocalypse is that readers think things are so terrifying that a military takeover could be Brazil’s only salvation. As in the case of so many articles about Brazil that initially appear in the corporate advocacy group AS/COA’s publication Americas Quarterly, the narrative is already disseminating into commercial newspapers. In the Guardian, Dom Phillips says, “Brazilians were spooked by the 10 day protest.” Ironically, further down in the article, he acknowledges the fact that 87% of Brazilians supported the strike. Are Brazilians spooked of the strike or did they support it?

One thing I have learned in my quarter century living in this wonderful country is that Brazilians do not scare easily. They definitely do not scare as easily as American or English people. To give a quick anecdotal example, Brazil was more dangerous in the 1990s than it is today. I lived in a favela for 6 years and have been in gunfire situations many times in various cities in Brazil. I can recall, on more than one occasion, being laughed at by Brazilians for ducking to the pavement or fleeing when people around me started shooting at each other.

Brazilians certainly do not scare easily and yes, 87% supported the “spooky” truckers’ strike, but a sizable minority of Brazilians do have fascist sympathies. I’ve known Brazilians who support a return to military rule since 1991. Frankly, there has always been a part of the population who like the idea of dictatorship. After all, we are talking about a country in which a large percentage of the white middle class supported the death squad assassinations of homeless children during the 1990s, where enthusiastic moviegoers stood up and cheered during torture and execution scenes of Afro-Brazilian teenagers in the movie Elite Squad in 2007, and where black people were forced to ride in service elevators until well into the 21st Century.

So why, in the aftermath of a historic truckers’ strike which paralyzed the nation, and a national petroleum workers strike (ignored in the media) which forced the resignation of Petrobras President Pedro Parente, would a new narrative develop about how scared Brazilians are clamoring for dictatorship? I suggest the following as a possible cause. Since the 2016 coup, American and European petroleum companies like Shell, Chevron and BP have made billions of dollars buying Brazilian offshore drilling rights at vastly below market rates. The Temer government also gave them tax exemptions that, over the course of the next 20 years, will save them an estimated $280 billion. Petrobras’ neoliberal restructuring, abandoning charging the actual cost for fuel produced in Brazil and linking to the international barrel price has driven prices up by over 50%, forced 1.2 million families to abandon cooking gas for scrap wood, and is strangling the working and middle classes that roughly correspond to the 87% of the population that supported the strike. The Petroleum unions and a large percentage of the truckers are demanding a reversal of Petrobras’ pricing policy and a reversal of the last 2 years of privatizations. They put the government on the ropes last week and it has already given into some of their demands, firing Pedro Parente and a career Shell Oil executive who was inexplicably placed on the Petrobras board of directors last year. Neither the truckers, the petroleum workers unions, nor other unions across the country who struck in solidarity with them last week say they will ease up until the pricing policy and privatization are reversed. If this happens, companies like Chevron, Exxon and Shell, which purchased content in the Guardian in 2016, will lose hundreds of billions of dollars. Depending on how the political conjecture plays out over the next few months, the only way to prevent this from happening and protect foreign oil interests may be a roll out of military control of the security apparatus from Rio de Janeiro to the entire nation, or even a military takeover. One way to get a northern public comfortable with the idea of a return to neofascist military rule is to paint a human face on it. It’s not that they are fascists, Phillips and Winter imply, they are just scared.

http://www.brasilwire.com/oil-industry- ... by-strike/
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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Wed Jun 06, 2018 1:22 pm

The Shirt Off Our Backs
Once a unifying national symbol, the Selecão football jersey is now toxic for many Brazilians

Facing worst shirt sales ever in the lead up to a World Cup, Brazil’s football federation the CBF has moved to ban sale of “Leftist” versions of the national team’s iconic jersey.

Red, and carrying both the antique logo of the CBD, the CBF’s predecessor, and a hammer and sickle, the design has caused social media sensation in Brazil, and provoked a flurry of imitations.

Image

Despite the clichés, Brazilian National Football Team, or Selecão, is still along with Carnaval one of the enormous country’s unifying institutions, and part of its nation building project.

Though sometimes the focus of political protest, as it was in 2013/14, this was never related to what was happening on the field. So confident was the foreign media that 2014 World Cup would bring mass protests to the streets which could somehow topple the Rousseff government, that when they didn’t occur as expected, some outlets reported them anyway, sometimes using material from the year prior. Instead, idealistic young protesters who had been photographed in 2013 with banners insisting that “We don’t want the World Cup we need schools and hospitals” were a year later posting selfies in the stadiums on instagram. The tournament was in Brazil and the majority were determined to enjoy it, regardless of political position – they’d already paid for it, after all.

But something has changed since 2014 in the relationship between Brazilians and the Selecão, and not because of the 7-1 rout against Germany, which may be quickly forgotten should Tite’s team perform to its potential in Russia.

Prior to the 2014 World Cup some conservatives were actually hoping for a humiliating Brazil defeat, believing that it could swing the coming election away from what was then a near certain victory for Dilma Rousseff. Rousseff went on to re-election anyway and the beginning of a breakdown in Brazil’s democratic order began immediately. With defeated Neoliberal Aécio Neves calling his supporters to the streets and vowing to obstruct any effort by Rousseff to govern, a synthesised movement began demanding her impeachment, a right-wing threat which had cast a shadow for some time.

With overt promotion from oligarchic media network Globo, conservative newspapers such as Estadão, and protest groups connected to foreign hedge funds and the Koch Brothers libertarian Atlas network, a small kernel of cranks screaming for military intervention on Sao Paulo’s Avenida Paulista grew to a few hundred thousand by March 2015, by then demanding Rousseff’s ouster by any means necessary. These protests, predominantly white and upper middle class, and ostensibly against a nebulous undefined “corruption”, had one other characteristic – a uniform of the yellow Selecão jersey. The aesthetic of these demonstrations was parodied famously during Rio’s 2018 Carnaval Parade (pictured below).

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The irony was not lost on Brazil’s left, the CBF being one of the most notoriously corrupt organisations in the country. As well as corruption, the CBF has all kinds of skeletons in its closet, and is filled with Ex-Dictatorship personnel, some even directly implicated in assassination and torture. In addition, the aesthetic of these 2015 demonstrations echoed the “Green & Yellow Nationalism” which brought to the streets an appearance of majority support for the Coup of 1964, which resulted in a 21 year dictatorship, and 25 years before Democracy was restored.

Emerging during the 1960s, “My only flag is the flag of Brazil”, or “My party is my country”, are still traditional conservative nationalist slogans, even when the underlying political agenda is erosion the country’s sovereignty, but football, via Socrates’ Corinthian Democracy movement, played a crucial part in the campaign for the restoration of direct elections during the 1980s.

Forward to August 2016, with anti-coup protesters being beaten, tear gassed and shot with rubber bullets (to collective silence from the english language media), some pundits laughably suggested that Brazil’s victory in the Rio Olympic football tournament would be the catharsis that the country needed to “move on” from a coup d’etat that was not only being denied, but still unfolding, with Dilma Rousseff awaiting her final removal from the presidency. This episode is recorded in the lauded new documentary ‘O Processo (The Trial)’ by Maria Augusta Ramos.

This notion that football would bring closure was as familiar as it was unwelcome. In 1970, Dictator Emiliano Medici, responsible for torture, assassination and brutal repression, used the victory in Mexico as propaganda during what is considered the darkest period of the dictatorship. “Brazil: love it or leave it”, was the regime’s slogan of the era, with many forced to do the latter.



2006 film ‘The year my Parents went on vacation’ dramatises this period of disappearances and exile. It has a memorable scene where opponents of the Dictatorship, young middle class Socialists, watch Brazil’s opening game against Czechoslovakia. Declaring that a victory for the Czechs would be a victory for Socialism, the group mutedly celebrate when the eastern european team score first, only to collectively lose it when Brazil equalise. You can be confident that Football will usually, temporarily succeed in overriding political sentiment in any nation which enjoys it, not least in Brazil. That’s one cliché that rings true at least.

But in 2018, the traditional yellow Selecão jersey is now politically toxic, having been transformed into a ultraconservative symbol that few on the left would be comfortable wearing. As a result a mini industry has developed around the trend for alternatives with which to show support for the Selecão but in doing so oppose the Coup, the extreme austerity and anti-national policies of hated President Michel Temer, and the corrupt CBF itself.

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Elections are scheduled for October, but with serious doubts that they will take place in a free and fair manner. Leading candidate, former president Lula, who is polling over double his nearest competitor (fascist Jair Bolsonaro), is now jailed for 12 years in what many consider a politically motivated conviction to prevent his return to the presidency. On charges for which there was no material evidence provided, he was denied habeus corpus by the Supreme Court following a televised threat from the head of Brazil’s armed forces of consequences should Lula be released. Many conservative politicians, with ample evidence against them, currently walk free, with their cases shelved or abandoned altogether. Both Lula and his Workers Party insist he will run from prison if not released prior to the election.

Small protests are expected at the World Cup in Russia demanding Lula’s release from jail, as occurred at Brazil’s friendly versus Croatia on June 3, at which Globo TV tried and failed to expel demonstrators, then edited their flags and messages out of the broadcast.

http://www.brasilwire.com/the-shirt-off-our-backs/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Wed Jun 13, 2018 12:50 pm

Beyond the restitution of Lula’s rights as a former President

The most recent ruling by Judge André Nabarrete indicated that former Brazilian heads of state are awarded “rights and prerogatives in consonance with the assumption of the Republic’s highest office, and have no legal limitations”

Author: Granma | internet@granma.cu

june 12, 2018 16:06:35


Lula continues to enjoy mass support in Brazil. Photo: TELESUR
SÃO PAULO.— The Regional Federal Court of the 3rd Region (TRF3) ruled on May 29 that Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s rights as a former President were to be restituted, overturning a May 17 decision to revoke them.

The most recent ruling was made by Judge André Nabarrete Neto, who indicated in his statement that former Brazilian heads of state are awarded “rights and prerogatives (not benefits) in consonance with the assumption of the Republic’s highest office, and have no legal limitations.”

It is worth recalling that these rights were withdrawn earlier by Judge Haroldo Nader, who justified the move saying that as long as Lula remained imprisoned, he was unable to make use of the prerogatives, teleSUR reported.

Nonetheless, the law stipulates that these rights are awarded to former Presidents for life, given the high ranking position they held.

“The explicit legal norms guarantee former Presidents not only security personnel, but also personal support and security for their property, since assistants of their confidence are needed to maintain their dignity and subsistence,” Judge Nabarrete explained in his ruling.

Thus this second level of the Brazilian court system reversed the May 17 decision by Judge Nader, describing as misguided the order to withdraw services to which Lula is entitled.

It is worth mentioning that all former Brazilian Presidents are entitled, by law and for life, to a team of eight people paid through the Cabinet budget.

Lula has been in prison since April 7, at the Federal Police headquarters in Curitiba, where he is serving a sentence of 12 years and one month for alleged corruption and money laundering, charges which have not been proven.

Beyond the restitution of his rights, the Brazilian Workers’ Party (PT) presidential candidate for the general elections of October, for which he is the favourite, remains in prison as a result of a rigged process.

WHAT WAS LULA’S CRIME?
÷÷ Helping to provide a platform that has given union movements and their struggles a voice.

÷÷ Winning the presidential elections in 2002 representing the PT, with the largest number of votes in the history of Brazil.

÷÷ An 80% approval rate in his second term, economic growth of 7.5%, and a minimum salary 54% higher than in his first term in government.

÷÷ Lifting more than 30 million Brazilians out of poverty, reducing the unemployment rate and placing the country on the map of emerging powers.

÷÷ Inspiring the largest country in Latin America and the Caribbean, and projecting an image of order and progress, just as is inscribed on its flag.

TIMELINE OF A WRONGFUL CONVICTION

2014

÷÷ The Petrobras scandal emerges.

÷÷ José Dirceu, former government minister under Lula, is detained.

÷÷ Lula and Dilma Rousseff are implicated in the corruption case.

2016

÷÷ The police begin to investigate Lula for influence peddling.

÷÷ Da Silva presents his written defense.

÷÷ Lula is accused of enriching himself through corruption.

÷÷ Public Prosecutor’s Office denounces the former Brazilian President for the first time.

÷÷ Lula goes from being a minister to a former minister in just one day.

÷÷ A judge in Brasilia accuses Lula of trying to bribe a defendant in the Petrobras case.

÷÷ Accept another indictment against Lula (now totaling five).

2017

÷÷ Lula testifies before Judge Sergio Moro.

÷÷ New accusation from the Public Prosecutor’s Office.

÷÷ Lula is sentenced to nine years in prison.

2018

÷÷ Appeals court upholds Lula’s conviction and increases his sentence.

÷÷ Go ahead given for Lula’s imprisonment.

÷÷ The Supreme Court rejects Lula’s final appeal.

BRAZIL DURING THE SAME PERIOD

2016

÷÷ President Dilma Rousseff is ousted from office.

÷÷ Michel Temer becomes President.

2017

÷÷ Da Silva doesn’t rule out running as a presidential candidate in 2018.

÷÷ In polls, support soars for the former president, while the process to prevent his candidacy advances.

÷÷ Political tensions led to an escalation of violence in the country’s streets.

2018

÷÷ Trucker drivers and oil workers strikes paralyze the nation.

÷÷ An increase in political violence, including the assassination of Marielle Franco.

÷÷ Lula put in isolation.

÷÷ Lula denied visits in Curitiba prison. Dilma Rousseff, Gleisi Hoffmann (PT president), Carlos Lupi (president of the Democratic Labor Party), Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, and intellectual Leonardo Boff are prevented from seeing him.

÷÷ Deputy Paulo Pimenta visits Lula and assures that he is aware of what is happening.

÷÷ Pimenta notes that Lula will be registered on August 15 as PT presidential candidate, and remains the favorite to win.

http://en.granma.cu/mundo/2018-06-12/be ... -president
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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Fri Jun 15, 2018 12:32 pm

The injustice against me is an injustice against the Brazilian people
Exclusive interview of Granma with Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, leader of the Workers' Party of Brazil

Author: Elson Concepción Pérez | internet@granma.cu

June 14, 2018 21:06:28

Image
Many leaders have ended up imprisoned simply for fighting for the people. Photo: Voice of America

The worker leader, the man who in his time as President of Brazil pushed for laws and social plans that allowed some 30 million Brazilians to be lifted out of poverty, to which all the polls give him as the favorite by a large majority to win the presidential elections of 2018, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, responded to an interview with Granma , a questionnaire that was sent to him by the friendly hand of a Brazilian.

The interview could not be - for obvious reasons - as wide as this journalist would wish. However, the fact of being imprisoned and having made an aside in their valuable time to answer our questions gives added value, not only to Cuban readers, but to those around the world.

-As a candidate for the Presidency of Brazil with the greatest popular support and that all the surveys indicate as a favorite, how do you rate this persecution and imprisonment to which you have been subjected?

-It is a political process, a political prison. The process against me fails to point a crime, nor is there evidence. They had to disrespect the Constitution to arrest me. What is becoming increasingly transparent for Brazilian society and for the world is that they want to get me out of the 2018 elections. The coup in 2016, with the withdrawal of an elected president, indicates that they do not admit that the people vote to whoever wants to vote.

-The prison has been, for many imprisoned leaders for the simple fact of fighting for the people, a place of reflection and organization of ideas to continue the struggle. In your case, how do you face those first days, since you are unable to get in touch with the people?

-I'm reading and thinking a lot, it's a moment of much reflection about Brazil and especially in what has happened in recent times. I am at peace with my conscience and I doubt that all those who lied against me sleep with the tranquility with which I sleep.
"Of course I would like to have freedom and be doing what I have done all my life: dialogue with the people. But I am aware that the injustice that is being committed against me is also an injustice against the Brazilian people. "

- How important is it to know that in all Brazilian states there are thousands of compatriots in favor of their liberation?

-The relationship that I have built over decades with the Brazilian people, with the entities of the social movements, is a very trusting relationship and it is something that I greatly appreciate, because throughout my political career I always insisted on never betraying that trust. And I would not betray that trust for any money, for an apartment, for nothing. It was like this before being president, during the presidency and after it. So, for me, that solidarity is something that excites me and encourages me to remain firm.

- How to define the concept of democracy imposed as patron of the oligarchy to discard the leaders of the left and who do not come to occupy power?

- Latin America lived in the last decades its strongest moment of democracy and social conquests. But recently the elites of the region are trying to impose a model where the democratic game is only valid when they win, which, of course, is not democracy. So it is an attempt at democracy without a people. When it does not come out the way they want, then they change the rules of the game to benefit the vision of a small minority. That is very serious. And we are seeing it, not only in Latin America, but throughout the world, an increase in intolerance and political persecution. It has happened in Brazil, Argentina, Ecuador and other countries.

- What message do you send to all those who, in Brazil and around the world, are in solidarity with you and demand their immediate release?

-I appreciate all the solidarity. It is necessary to be in solidarity with the Brazilian people. Unemployment increases, more than a million families have returned to cooking with firewood because of the increase in the price of cooking gas, millions who had left the misery are having no more to eat, and even the middle class has lost employment and income.

"Brazil was on a trajectory of decades of democratic progress, of political participation and together with them social advances, which accelerated with the governments of the PT, which won four elections in a row.

They have not struck only against the PT. They did not arrest me just to harm Lula. They did so against a model of national development and social inclusion. The coup has been struck to eliminate the rights of workers and retirees, conquered in the last 60 years. And the people are perceiving that. And we are going to need a lot of organization to return to having a popular government, with sovereignty, social inclusion and economic development in Brazil. "

Lula asked us to thank two special messages: "I take this opportunity to thank the solidarity greetings of colleagues Raúl Castro and Miguel Díaz-Canel, which were transmitted to me by Frei Betto", the same friend who sent us the answers to this interview.

http://www.granma.cu/mundo/2018-06-14/l ... 8-21-06-28

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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Mon Jun 18, 2018 1:12 pm

Operation Car Wash: A Tale of Two Sergio Moros

Judge Sergio Moro’s Curitiba task force, its parallel power and four-year influence on Brazilian politics and economy.

By Rodrigo Tacla Duran*

Gag. In Portuguese it’s a feminine noun that is synonymous with a muzzle, cloth or any object put in the mouth to impede someone from speaking or screaming. It is also a verb that means the use of force to impede someone from speaking. The short and precise definition from the Aurelio dictionary reveals that gag is the sister of brutality and the child of authoritarianism and intolerance. On June 2, the lawyer Renato Moraes published an article in O Globo newspaper in which he exposed the harsh reality of a Brazil where the Judiciary has set a bad example by scorning the law and the Constitution. The brilliant legal scholar wrote, “we’ve arrived at the edge of an authoritarian precipice. There are those who unabashedly present the rationale that in conflicts between the Constitution and a vague popular will you should side with the people, as if the Constitution was not our only protection against authoritarianism.”

In his criticism of judicial populism, Moraes says that the public opinion is the “beloved daughter” of the published opinion. It is, he says, connected in real time to the means of communication with an aggravating factor: in this era of big investigations, the published opinion comes in a prepackaged form, complete with leaks from the public prosecutor’s office, the police and even judges. A large part of the press has stopped investigating to ensure the contradictory and transformed into a docile communications channel poisoned by those who decide to do justice by ignoring the Brazilian Constitution and the laws, instead applying legal norms that were voted on and approved by the United States Congress.

In this Brazil where lower court judges try to apply American laws, prosecutors insult Supreme Court Ministers as if they were in Maracana or Itaquerão football stadium and plea bargain testimonies are selective, I suddenly find myself in an unusual situation: I have been barred from testifying by orders from Judge Sergio Moro. I imagine that a situation like this could have happened during the Brazilian New State of the 1930s, or during the Military Dictatorship, but it is inexplicable in a democracy. In addition to being illegal, it is unfair because it violates the defendant’s right to present proof from witnesses who they deem important for their defense. The only two times in which I was heard and allowed to present my version about certain facts were on November 30, 2017, during the Congressional investigation of the JBS meat packing company, and on June 5 of this year, to the Congressional Human Rights Commission. The Public Prosecutors Office showed no interest in any facts I presented in either case.

My testimony was heard by representatives of the justice systems in Peru, Andorra, Switzerland, Argentina, Ecuador, Mexico and Spain. Among the direct and indirect consequences of these testimonies, an ex-minister from Ecuador was arrested, a Peruvian president resigned, and Uruguay extradited an ex-employee of BPA Bank to Andorra. These events were all widely covered in the international press. But, as if none of that were relevant, I continue to be prohibited from testifying in the Brazilian Justice System. I was never allowed to testify even though ex-President Lula’s defense team summoned me 5 times.

Judge Sergio Moro recently dismissed a request from Marcelo Odebrecht’s defense team to hear the lawyers Monica Odebrecht, his sister, and his brother-in- law Mauricio Carvalho Ferro. A hearing from the Odebrecht lawyer Marta Pacheco was deferred, but with due respect for the prerogative of professional confidentiality. It is correct that that everyone’s prerogatives should be respected, including professional secrecy. But in doing this you cannot apply two standards to two different people. When I worked for Odebrecht, I dealt with these three professionals on the same issues that the judge recognizes deserve protection. Nevertheless, the Curitiba task force didn’t have the same zeal for the prerogatives when they dealt with me. To the contrary, they criminalized my work as a lawyer and pressured me the entire time to release the same confidential information that judge Sergio Moro had decided to protect in other cases.

Over two years ago I spontaneously approached the Car Wash task force in Curitiba. I personally met with the prosecutors on three occasions. I did not reveal any confidential information about any client. In all of the meetings, I was treated as someone who had already been judged and condemned. The only thing left was for me to be arrested. I have been a lawyer for more than 20 years. I looked at that situation and thought: this is not possible. How can they condemn me without a trial, without proof, and without a sentence? The prosecutors from the Curitiba task force never wanted to listen to me, to know what I had to say, or give me the opportunity of contradiction. They threatened me with pretrial imprisonment the entire time. It is humiliating to be accused of crimes you did not commit and to be publicly insulted and and disqualified.

By not giving me a chance to defend myself, Judge Sergio Moro ignored the Constitution, the Organic Law of the Magistrate, the Penal Code, the Penal Process Code, the Law Statute and the UN’s Human Rights Statute. It even ignored the laws from the United States the he cares so much about because nobody there is condemned without proof or the right to a defense. Kant taught that injustice is an action that impedes the freedom of the other and, in this specific case, I refer to the right of a full defense. Therefore, no judge can adopt conduct that is different from what is proscribed by law, even if he disagrees with it. Injustice is a choice and justice is a responsibility. There is no shortcut for those who respect the rule of law. To condemn, you need to investigate, prove and contradict. It takes work and can take a long time but it is the correct thing to do. In my case, they never presented any proof against me, and investigations against me were dismissed in Spain for lack of proof.

There are serious issues that limit not only my right of defense but that of many others. The first of these is the disappearance of the São Paulo Federal Police’s Investigation 186/2016. It simply disappeared. Part of this investigation was sent to the Parliamentary Investigation into JBS meat packing company on the occasion of my testimony. That inquiry is very important to my defense because it contains clarifications on the accusations made against me. For two months my lawyers have been trying to locate this Investigation. The São Paulo Federal Police say that they forwarded it to Curitiba. However, in Curitiba, this Investigation does not exist because nobody can say where it is. The disappearance of a Federal Police Investigation is a serious problem.

In my case, it is not the first time that something like this happened. Last year, I asked the Curitiba 1st Court of Municipal Tax Enforcement Notary Public of file a certificate stating that Carlos Zucolotto had worked as defense lawyer on lawsuits involving my family. The Notary took nearly 6 months to issue the certificate and, when it did, issued it without Carlos Zuculotto’s name. After all of these delays, the Notary informed me that the the sub-establishment granted to Zucolotto’s office had been removed from the records without any judicial authorization without communication from the involved parties. A lawyer in my office received unofficial information that the sub-establishment was removed by hand of Zuculotto himself. According to this unofficial source he alleged to have not authorized the attachment of these documents to the files. However, I have an email with his authorization for this. These very serious facts were omitted by the magistrate who, once conscious of them, should have taken measures to clarify the issue because because this is documentary evidence that would be fundamental for any eventual solicitation of impediment or suspicion of judge Sergio Moro.

For four years we have lived with two judges, two Moros. The first became a hero in Brazil and abroad for his actions in Operation Car Wash and his uncompromising position on corruption. This Moro is celebrated in auditoriums in the United States and in the Principality of Monaco. The other Moro is harshly criticized by judges and lawyers who don’t conform with his violations of prerogatives, such as in the wire tapping of ex-President Lula’s lawyers and multiple search and seizures in law offices, including mine. This Moro is also criticized by human rights defenders in and out of Brazil for the practice of limiting the right to defense and politicizing Brazilian criminal proceedings. This is Sergio Moro’s dark side.

Judge Moro first got mad at me because I was ordered to give the Internal Revenue Service the names of my Office’s collaborators and the name of the lawyer Carlos Zuculotto [who is a firm partner with Sergio Moro’s wife Rosangela and represents several Car Wash defendants] my correspondent in Curitiba, appeared on the list of service providers. This professional relationship with Zucolotto began long before any investigation started against me. At the time, I did not have the slightest idea that he had been the best man at Moro’s wedding and is a friend of his. I was obliged to give this information to the Internal Revenue Service during the course of an audit of my Office, which took two years and was extended ten times. Finally, they concluded that I did not commit any accounting errors or fiscal irregularities, much less any type of crime.

Later, in 2016, Zucolotto asked me for R$5 million in exchange for his intermediating of negotiations with the Car Wash Task Force, the content of which amounted to a sentence for a crime that I did not commit. Strangely, this inconvenient truth has never been investigated. Nevertheless there have recently been reports of the sale of protection by other Curitiba task force lawyers, which makes an investigation necessary to clarify possible cases of influence peddling, administrative advocacy or extortion.

Today those who criticize the Curitiba task force for its production of serial plea bargain testimonies are considered enemies of Operation Car Wash. Could it be that lawyers who defend their prerogatives, the rites of law and legal guarantees are now enemies of “Car Wash” and considered accomplices in corruption? Could it be that we have to be complacent with the brutality, the violation of laws and the disrespect for rights practiced by public officials? This is very similar to that which the writer Hannah Arendt defined as the banality of evil while writing about Adolph Eichmann’s trial in 1961.

The Car Wash operation has become a center of political power capable of destroying reputations, businesses and institutions. In reality it is a form of parallel power which has, for four years, influenced the country’s political and economic management without having a mandate or the qualifications to do it. It’s pressured Congress, the Executive and the Federal Supreme Court, trampled on lawyers constitutional prerogatives and criminalized defenders as if they were the only legitimate people to have a monopoly over ethics and morals.

When I was listed as a witness for ex-President Lula, I became the target of attacks and was publicly condemned by prosecutors from the Curitiba task force. At that moment, I understood that I would never be accepted as a witness, not for ex-President Lula or President Michel Temer, in whose accusations from the Federal Public Prosecutors my name is cited. I will not be a witness for anyone because this is the wish of Judge Sergio Moro and the task force prosecutors. They cite the Law of Abuse of Authority and the Gag Law, but they don’t have the slightest qualms about gagging witnesses capable of threatening their theories and prosecution strategies.

Even though he knows that I was never condemned for anything and had my extradition request denied by the Spanish Judiciary, Judge Sergio Moro offended me on live national TV on the Roda Viva program. Without the slightest ceremony, he broke the decorum required in article 36, paragraph 3 of the Organic Law of the Magistrate, and prejudged and condemned me.

If he didn’t listen to me, never gave me an opportunity to defend myself and hasn’t judged me because he doesn’t have the jurisdiction for this, he can’t and shouldn’t, out of respect for the law, make a value judgment, prejudge, defame or slander me. He is a judge, not an accuser.

Justice is an asset in democratic societies that must be exercised with authority, never with authoritarianism. When a judge makes a public opinion against someone who is a defendant in his or her court, this is prejudicial and violates one of the most basic principles of human rights, namely, the right to an impartial, exempt, technical trial without any emotions of any kind.

Sergio Moro may have barred me from testifying, but he won’t be able to shut me up.

*Former lawyer for Odebrecht Engineering Company, currently based in Spain.

This article first appeared in Conjur and can be read in its original Portuguese here

http://www.brasilwire.com/operation-car ... gio-moros/
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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Fri Jun 22, 2018 11:08 am

Brasil Wire Addresses Brazilian Congress
CENSORSHIP MEDIA POLITICS SOCIAL MEDIA

Brasil Wire editor Brian Mier addresses Brazilian Congress on fake news, censorship and the independent media.

On Monday morning, June 19th, I was invited to fly to Brasilia to address Congress on the subject of fake news and the independent media. My invitation, extended by the progressive news outlet Brasil 247, was the result of a sequence of recent events involving Facebook’s mislabeling of factual stories about Pope Francis delivering a Rosary to President Lula as fake news, and the Temer government’s announcement of a new, governmental fake news analyzing committee for the election season. I was invited to give an American perspective on the concept of fake news and, like all the other speakers, I was given 5 minutes to get my point across. This is how it went.



Transcript

Good afternoon everyone. I am grateful for the invitation to speak here in Congress. As an immigrant to Brazil, it is an honor. I hope that you can show a little patience with my Portuguese.

I want to speak a little about this debate. I think it is important to add a bit of context, as an American who comes from the country which recently created this definition of fake news. Fake news is not Yellow Journalism. The big news companies, the media oligarchies, the New York Times and the Guardian, always publish manipulative news, mainly in times of War. In 2002 and 2003 we saw hundreds of articles which spread false information about Saddam Hussain and weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and a war resulted from this.

So it is nothing new that false news is spreading around on the internet or by the big media companies. However, in 2016 after Hilary Clinton lost the election, the more conservative sector of the Democratic Party, instead of assuming responsibility for organizing a poor electoral campaign and losing, began to blame the Russians for manipulating the elections. They created this term fake news to describe a process in which a foreign government, working through internet companies and bots, manipulates the news in another country during an election season. This hasn’t been definitively proven yet – but when the concept of fake news began to spread through the United States, the big media companies like the New York Times, Washington Post and CNN, who have been losing space on the internet for years to independent media organizations, started to manipulate the term to discredit and defame their competition.

After the scandal during which it was revealed that Facebook was selling private information about its users, pressure mounted on Mark Zuckerberg. He said, “we’re sorry. Facebook will do better”. He was summoned to testify in England, the European Union and in American Congress and during this, he announced that they were going to adopt measures to fight the so-called fake news.

Starting this April, when the algorithms changed, the first result was that the biggest progressive alternative media vehicles began to loose reach. Media outlets like Alternet, Democracy Now, Counterpunch, which is a progressive magazine that has been around for decades, immediately registered losses in reach ranging from 20-60%. And when I see what is happening in Brazil, with the highly respected Forum Magazine, with Brasil 247- both publications run by veteran journalists- how they were victims of censorship last week, I would like to say the following. I think that it is wrong to leave censorship in the hands of the private sector. Any type of censorship is wrong, however if crimes of slander, defamation or racism are committed on Facebook, Facebook should be blamed for them as well. I think it would be interesting for the Brazilian Congress to summon Mark Zuckerberg here to provide clarification and explain what he is doing with the Brazilian people’s personal data, what he is doing with his self-regulating censorship of fake news, and what Facebook’s role was in the 2013 protests. Thank you.

http://www.brasilwire.com/brasil-wire-in-congress/

All true I think but trolling the Zuk falls short of the heart of the issue, private ownership and control of the internet. Besides, he seems to be something of a masochist and enjoys self-flagellation. We shouldn't encourage that.
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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Thu Jun 28, 2018 4:46 pm

Trump Administration’s Anti-Venezuela Crusade Meets Fresh Obstacles in Brazil
US Vice President Mike Pence found the leaders of the South American giant reluctant to impose sanctions and concerned with US immigration policies.

Image
Brazilian President Michel Temer (L) greets US VP Mike Pence. Brasilia, Brazil. (REUTERS / Adriano Machado)

By Cira Pascual Marquina
Jun 27th 2018 at 10.40pm

https://venezuelanalysis.com/NZJ5

Caracas, June 27, 2018 (venezuelanalysis.com) – As part of a tour of several Latin American countries, US Vice President Mike Pence visited Brazil on Tuesday and Wednesday seeking “stronger action” against Venezuela. However, in bilateral meetings with de facto President Michel Temer and other Brazilian officials, Pence encountered resistance to his call for further sanctions against Caracas.

“The US has a very strong position, which does not exactly match ours,” explained Brazil’s Foreign Minister Aloysio Nunes. “For us, the topic of Venezuela is placed where it should be, which is in the OAS [Organization of American States]. Brazil does not accept sanctions. We are against unilateral decisions.”

Since the controversial 2016 ouster of leftist President Dilma Rousseff, Brazil has supported the efforts of the US and other regional right-wing governments to isolate the Maduro government in Caracas. The South American giant is believed to have played a key role in expelling Venezuela from Mercosur and signed the Lima Group’s statement criticizing Venezuela's May 20 elections. However, the Temer administration does not appear poised to follow Washington, Brussels, and Ottawa in adopting unilateral sanctions.

According to the Brazilian constitution, such punitive measures must be multilateral and follow the lead of the UN Security Council.

The Trump administration has since taking office imposed round after round of individual and economic sanctions on Venezuela. Canada and the European Union have followed suit with their own measures targeting top Caracas officials.

But sanctions were not the only point of tension between Pence and his Brazilian hosts.

During the meeting, acting President Temer made clear that the separation of parents from children among Brazilian immigrant families to the US was an “extremely sensitive” issue in his country. Images of caged children, the result of Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigration policy, have sent shock waves throughout Latin America.

Nonetheless, Pence tried to assuage concerns over the immigration controversy. “We are working to reunite families, including Brazilian families. We will continue to work closely with [the Brazilian] government so that that happens.”

Additionally, the conservative hardliner vice president spoke of the ”strategic partnership“ between the two countries and pledged a million more dollars of aid for Brazil to address what he calls the “crisis” of Venezuelan migration.

Despite the apparent friction, relations between Washington and Brazilia are the closest in decades. Last November, Brazil hosted the armed forces of the US and over a dozen other nations in military exercises along its shared border with Colombia and Peru, just a little over 630 kilometers south of Venezuela.

Meanwhile from Caracas, Venezuelan Foreign Affairs Minister Jorge Arreaza responded forcefully to Pence's statements against his government.

“What an irony and hypocrisy that Vice President Pence, whose racist government separates families and cages innocent children, intends to interfere in the affairs of our region,” Arreaza said via Twitter, adding, “Venezuela and Brazil reject the presence of such a violator of Latin American immigrants' human rights.”

Pence’s next stop is Ecuador before proceeding to Guatemala and then other Central American countries.

https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/13905

Looks like the current crop of Brazilian oligarchs don't understand the terms of imperialism. Shudda read the fine print, huh.
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Re: Brazil

Post by blindpig » Mon Jul 09, 2018 3:48 pm

Judge Orders Brazil Ex-President Lula da Silva Freed - Reports © AFP 2018 / NELSON ALMEIDA

21:29 08.07.2018(updated 22:22 08.07.2018) Get short URL6382
MEXICO CITY (Sputnik) - An appeals court judge, Rogerio Favreto, ruled Sunday that former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, currently serving a 12-year jail term on corruption charges, must be released from prison, Excelsior reported Sunday.

According to the Excelsior news portal, the precise date of Lula's release is not yet known.

Lula, who served as the country’s president from 2003 through 2010, was sentenced to 9.5 years in prison last summer for allegedly accepting a luxury apartment from a construction firm in return for political favors. Lula denied the accusations.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva gestures during a demonstration in support of Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff's appointment of him as her chief of staff, at Paulista avenue in Sao Paulo, Brazil

An appeals court upheld the ruling in January and increased Lula's jail term to 12 years and a month. He went to prison three months later in the city of Curitiba after federal judge Sergio Moro issued an arrest warrant for Lula.

https://sputniknews.com/latam/201807081 ... shortening

If this come off, and they do not find another way to jail him, or kill him, he will win the election, if they allow it to happen. And if that does happen there will be a coup, what happens after that is anyone's guess but the Brazilian people seem pretty energized.
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