Brazil prosecutor requests Bolsonaro ‘meddling’ probe | Sunday Observer

Brazil prosecutor requests Bolsonaro ‘meddling’ probe

26 April, 2020
Bolsonaro denied the allegations, flanked by most of his cabinet (AFP)
Bolsonaro denied the allegations, flanked by most of his cabinet (AFP)

BRASILIA, April 25. (BBC) - Brazil’s top public prosecutor has requested clearance to investigate allegations of political interference by President Jair Bolsonaro.

It comes after Justice Minister Sergio Moro resigned yesterday, accusing the president of wanting to install a new federal police chief who would provide him with intelligence reports.

Mr Bolsonaro denies the allegation. The row has thrown his administration into turmoil as it struggles to address the coronavirus crisis.

Brazil has nearly 55,000 confirmed cases of the virus and more than 3,700 have died, according to Johns Hopkins University in the US.

Earlier this month, the president sacked his Health Minister Luiz Henrique Mandetta for his response to the coronavirus pandemic. The minister had advocated social distancing, which Mr Bolsonaro has scorned.

Brazil’s public prosecutor Augusto Aras has now asked the Supreme Court to allow an investigation into Mr Moro’s allegations against the president.

On Friday Mr Bolsonaro fired federal police chief Mauricio Valeixo - an ally of Mr Moro - without publishing a reason for the decision. He was replaced by Alexandre Ramagem, chief of the Brazilian Intelligence Agency.

Earlier, on Thursday, Mr Moro had threatened to resign if Mr Valeixo was removed but then said he would stay if he could choose his replacement.

However he resigned on Friday, describing Mr Valeixo’s sacking “without a genuine reason” as “political interference that harms my credibility and that of the government”.

Mr Moro alleged that the president was meddling in federal police efforts to fight corruption. He said Mr Bolsonaro had told him he was replacing Mr Valeixo to install someone with whom he had “personal contact, whom he could call, ask for information, intelligence reports”.

“Providing this type of information is not the job of the federal police,” he said. Mr Moro also alleged Mr Bolsonaro had said one reason for ousting Mr Valeixo was that he was “worried” about some ongoing investigations.

Firing Mr Valeixo was also “a signal that the president wanted me out”, he added. Mr Moro is a popular figure in Brazil. He is a former judge who oversaw the country’s biggest anti-corruption probe, which uncovered billions of dollars of bribes and led to the convictions of dozens of high-profile business leaders and politicians.

The sound of pot-banging protests rang out in cities across Brazil after his resignation was announced.

In a televised address, the far-right president called the claims against him “baseless” and said he could choose who he wanted as federal police chief.

“The appointment is mine, the prerogative is mine and the day I have to submit to any of my subordinates I cease to be president of the republic,” Mr Bolsonaro said flanked by most of his cabinet in the presidential palace in Brasília. He also accused Mr Moro of demanding a nomination to the supreme court in return for agreeing to Mr Valeixo’s replacement.

Mr Moro has denied this, saying it was “never used as currency in exchange for me being named to” the top court.

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