Brazil’s leftist icon Lula walks free from jail

Published November 10, 2019
Brazilian former president (2003-2011) Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (C) speaks next to Brazilian former presidential candidate for the Workers' Party (PT), Fernando Haddad (2-L), during a rally outside the metalworkers' union building in Sao Bernardo do Campo, in metropolitan Sao Paulo, Brazil, on November 9.  — AFP
Brazilian former president (2003-2011) Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (C) speaks next to Brazilian former presidential candidate for the Workers' Party (PT), Fernando Haddad (2-L), during a rally outside the metalworkers' union building in Sao Bernardo do Campo, in metropolitan Sao Paulo, Brazil, on November 9. — AFP

CURITIBA: Brazil’s leftist icon Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva walked free from jail on Friday after a year and a half behind bars for corruption following a court ruling that could release thousands of convicts.

The former president, wearing a black T-shirt and suit jacket, pumped his fist as he exited the federal police headquarters in the southern city of Curitiba and was quickly mobbed by hundreds of supporters and journalists.

In an impassioned address in a sometimes hoarse voice, Lula vowed to keep fighting for poor people and denounced the economic policies of the current right-wing president, Jair Bolsonaro.

“People are hungrier, they have no jobs, people work for Uber or delivering pizzas on a bike,” Lula said in remarks sometimes drowned out by cheers from the crowd and fireworks overhead. Lula’s highly anticipated exit from the facility where he had been held since April 2018 came hours after his lawyers requested the immediate release of the 74-year-old, who has been serving a nearly nine-year sentence for corruption and money laundering.

The Supreme Court overturned a rule requiring convicted criminals to go to jail after losing their first appeal. Lula is one of several thousand convicts who could benefit from the decision. Those convicts would remain free until they had exhausted their rights to appeal — a process critics say could take years in cases involving people able to afford expensive lawyers. Many of those affected by the 6-5 ruling are political and business leaders caught up in a massive corruption probe dubbed Car Wash that began in 2014.

The Supreme Court ruling had given Lula “hope that there could be justice,” his lawyer Cristiano Zanin said.

“Our judicial battle continues, our focus is to get the legal case nullified.”

Lula, who led Brazil through a historic boom from 2003 to 2010, earning him the gratitude of millions of Brazilians for redistributing wealth to haul them out of poverty, was serving eight years and 10 months for corruption.

He was sentenced to almost 13 years in jail in February in a separate corruption case and still faces another half dozen corruption trials.

Lula has denied all the charges, arguing they were politically motivated to keep him out of the 2018 presidential election that was won by Bolsonaro.

“I’m coming for you, wait for me!” Rosangela da Silva, Lula’s girlfriend, tweeted after the Supreme Court announced its decision. “If all the others did worse and are free, why not him too?” Eleonora Cintra, a 74-year-old resident of Sao Paulo, said. Bolsonaro has been unusually quiet about the court’s ruling that freed his nemesis. But his sons have taken to Twitter to attack the decision.

“Thousands of prisoners will be released and rattle everyone, regardless of their political beliefs, generating serious internal and external social and economic reactions,” Carlos Bolsonaro tweeted.

Justice Minister Sergio Moro, who convicted Lula when he was a judge in 2017, said the Supreme Court’s decision must be respected, but he noted “Congress can modify the Constitution or the law” to allow the jailing of convicted criminals after their first appeal.

Lula’s release could invigorate the left and, paradoxically, also help Bolsonaro, who was swept to power in 2018 on a wave of anti-PT sentiment, said Thomaz Favaro of Control Risks consultancy.

Published in Dawn, November 10th, 2019

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