Investigado pelo juiz Sergio Moro, o ex-presidente Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva parece estar convencido de que a força-tarefa da Operação Lava Jato já tem um objetivo traçado: condená-lo e tentar impedir que ele volte a concorrer à presidência da República, em 2018.
Foi o que ele declarou em
entrevista exclusiva ao jornalista Jonathan Watts, do jornal britânico
The Guardian, o mais respeitado da Inglaterra. Nela, Lula não demonstrou
preocupação com um eventual processo criminal. "As
conquistas dos últimos 13 anos não serão perdidas com o fato de eu ser
processado ou não", disse ele. "Não pretendo mudar o que eu sou. E eu
fui o melhor presidente da história do Brasil."
Lula, no entanto, ainda
não se anunciou candidato. "Seria muito difícil repetir a minha
performance e eu teria que competir comigo mesmo." O ideal, diz ele,
seria ter algum candidato que pudesse ser apoiado pelas forças de
esquerda.
Sobre as investigações,
Lula afirmou que não há ninguém tão tranquilo quanto ele e disse que
será possível, no seu caso, verificar se as acusações relacionadas ao
sítio de Atibaia e ao apartamento no Guarujá são verdadeiras ou falsas.
Em relação ao
impeachment, ele afirmou que não se arrepende de ter indicado a
presidente Dilma Rousseff para sucedê-lo e que ela não cometeu crime
algum. Mas afirmou que cabe a ela dizer à sociedade como pretende
governar após retomar o poder.
Leia, abaixo, a reportagem em inglês:
'There is no crime': Brazil's ex-president keeps faith in party and justice system
On the night Brazil’s lower house voted to impeach the country’s president Dilma Rousseff, she watched the proceedings on television with her predecessor in office, Luiz Ignácio Lula da Silva.
Rousseff appeared calm
throughout and even ordered popcorn. But Lula – an unapologetically
emotional man – broke into tears at least three times.
“It was very sad. I
suffered a lot,” the Workers’ party founder recalled in an interview
with the Guardian. “I saw the project to transform this country falling
apart.”
Once a beacon of hope for
a fairer global society, the Workers’ party that Lula founded is being
decapitated, and its achievements over 13 years of government in
alleviating poverty, increasing access to education and boosting
healthcare spending are unravelling as a result of recession and budget
cuts.
When he left office in
2010, Lula – as he is universally known – was the world’s most popular
president, a charismatic figurehead of a newly confident developing
world and the architect of a democratic, centre-left project to reduce
inequality in Brazil.
Since then, however, the
economy has deteriorated, the global political winds have changed
direction from cooperation to competition, and a vast anti-corruption
investigation in Brazil has claimed swathes of senior politicians,
including several of Lula’s allies.
Today, he knows he could be put on trial any day.
The former president is the target of at least four criminal
investigations; his private phone calls have been secretly recorded and
leaked to the media; police have briefly detained him for questioning.
His successor, Roussef,f has been suspended, impeached and so undermined
by the interim centre-right government that even though she is still
officially president of Brazil, friends have started a crowdfunding
campaign to pay for her travel expenses.
The downfall of the
Workers’ party government has been of Shakespearean proportions, though
whether Lula is the victim or the villain remains a subject of fierce
debate.
The question of who is to
blame splits the country largely on political fault lines. The right
claims Lula is a King Lear-like figure who authored his own demise
through economic mismanagement, political mistakes and by fostering a
culture of corruption throughout the state sector. The left portray him
more as an Othello, a great leader undermined by treachery.
Mass protests earlier
this year suggest many voters were tired of a politician and a party
that failed to meet rising expectations and became enmeshed in a system
they had promised to change.
Lula sees things
differently. He believes the Workers’ party’s emphasis on the poor,
redistribution policies and increased spending on public education and
health were resented by a political class that had grown used to having
thing their way.
“I sincerely believe this
bothered a lot of people. There are now more (newly middle class
people) in the streets, in theatres, in airports. Part of the elite
don’t want to share,” he says.
The leaks and
investigations, as he sees them, are part of a plot to remove the
Workers’ party and to prevent him from running again for president in
two years’ time.
“I believe there is an
arrangement between some parts of the media, the prosecutors’ office and
the police to destroy my image,” he says. “It is all with one
objective: to convict Lula. [There are people who believe] ‘we cannot
allow this man to run in 2018’.”
Given the broader
regional context of recent election defeats for leftwing governments in
Argentina, Venezuela and Bolivia, some on the left go further. They see
darker forces at work, including plots by the CIA.
But Lula dismisses
suggestions the United States is involved in conspiracies to undermine
leftwing leaders in the region . “I don’t believe it,” he says.
“Venezuelans have reason to suspect the US because of the coup [that
briefly removed Hugo Chávez] in 2002 … But I think the brothers in
Venezuela are making a mistake. They need dialogue with all sectors of
society.”
Lula was a close ally of
Chávez and of Nestor Kirchner in Argentina. Earlier this year, he
reached for a football metaphor to describe the three of them in their
heyday as the “Messi, Neymar and Suárez” of the Latin American left.
I lost three elections, but I respected the people’s choice of the winner. But the right won’t wait
Luiz Ignácio Lula da Silva
Unlike his Venezuelan
counterpart, however, Lula preferred negotiation to confrontation and
refused to amend the constitution so he could run endlessly for office.
Instead, he stood down at the end of his second term and let Rousseff
take his place. “I’ve said many times that the most important thing in a
democracy is a change in power. I didn’t run for a third (consecutive)
term. I don’t believe in people who can’t be replaced. That’s how
dictatorship is born.”
This makes him all the
more frustrated at the way the Workers’ party has been pushed from power
although it has not been beaten in a national election since 1998. In
2014, it won another four-year presidential mandate. Yet less than half way through that term, it has been forced out.
“I lost three elections, but I respected the people’s choice of the winner,” he said. “But the right won’t wait.”
He has not yet given up
hope that Rousseff can make a comeback. To survive in the final vote on
17 August, she needs to persuade six senators to change their minds. It
sounds like a small number, but Lula acknowledges they will require a
huge amount of convincing. Although he doesn’t say it directly, he seems
exasperated that Rousseff does not put up more of a fight.
“Dilma needs to say what
will happen in Brazil if she returns to the presidency. She has to say
what she will do that will be new, how she will build new political
relationships. She must say that. I can’t. She must make people
believe.”
There has been constant
speculation of a rift between Lula and Rousseff, particularly on the
right. One former president, Fernando Henrique Cordoso, told the
Guardian Lula’s biggest mistake was his choice of successor. Another
former president, José Sarney, was secretly recorded saying Lula had
told him much the same thing. The plea-bargainer Delcídio do Amaral
suggested the relationship between the two Workers’ party leaders is
competitive. Adding fuel to this talk was Lula’s decision not to join
other senior party members at a farewell press conference for Rousseff
at the Planalto presidential palace.
Lula, however, insists he has no regrets. “I’m proud of nominating Dilma and getting her elected,” he says.
It is Lula, however, who
has generated the greatest passions. Polls suggest he is still the most
popular politician in Brazil, with a 21% support rate, narrowly ahead of
the former environment minister Marina Silva, on 19%, and the former
pro-business presidential candidate Aécio Neves, on 17%. Rousseff barely
scrapes 10%, and the interim president, Michel Temer, according to the
most recent survey, has an approval rating of 13%.
Lula - a deeply divisive
figure - also has the highest rejection rate of any politician, but he
remains the focus of Workers’ party hopes. Many hope he will run and win
again. He says the decision will be up to the party.
“I’d like someone else to
run. I left with an 87% approval rating. I was the best president in
the history of Brazil. It is almost mission impossible to try to repeat
that performance. I’d have to compete against myself.”
The decision will also be
up to the judges. Lula is the prime target of the Lava Jato (Car Wash)
investigation into corruption at the state-run oil company Petrobras.
Prosecutors have uncovered a mountain of evidence that directors at
Petrobras and other state-owned companies paid over the odds to
contractors in return for kickbacks and campaign donations to
politicians and parties in the ruling coalition.
Lula’s supporters argue
this common practice was ethically ugly but not illegal, adding that it
predated the Workers’ party and applied to all the other parties and
also private sector deals. Critics say that under Lula, corruption was
systematised and elevated to new levels.
There is a reason for
that. Unlike the right, the Workers’ party could not call on the private
sector to provide the huge campaign funds needed to win elections and
buy support in congress. The best that can be said of this is that it
was corruption for ideological rather than personal goals. The worst is
that it ran utterly contrary to the party’s promise to clean up
politics. Instead, the Workers’ party was sucked into the mire.
Lula claims the issue is simply one of campaign funding and could best be cleared up by reform.
“Why don’t they
investigate how all political parties raise funds?” the former president
says. “The way it has been done, you get the impression that all the
money for the PT [Workers’ party] is dirty, and all the money to the
PSDB [the rightwing Brazilian Social Democratic party] is clean.”
But regardless of the
claim of double standards, shouldn’t Lula – as the former leader of the
country and the party who benefited politically from this system – be
held responsible for endemic corruption that cheated the public out of
billions of reais? That is the charge that has been made by prosecutors,
who allege Lula was the mastermind of the illegal Petrobras scheme.
There is nobody in Brazil as tranquil as me. If I face trial, we’ll know whether (the allegations) are true or not
The former president insists this is based on a mistaken assumption.
“There is the theory that
‘the boss must know’ or that we are guilty of incompetence [for not
knowing]. But there is no crime,” he claims.
This is not the only
threat from investigators. The most advanced case against him is that he
obstructed justice and set in motion an attempt to buy off a potential
witness against him. The plea-bargainer Amaral told the Guardian he had testified that Lula asked him to “help out” a former Petrobras director, Nestor Cervero, who was arrested last year.
This led first to payments to the detained man’s family and then to
discussions about how to get him out of the country by plane or boat.
Lula says Amaral is lying. “He’s built a fantasy narrative to help
himself,” he says, arguing that the judge’s use of preventive detentions
to secure plea-bargains is bound to produce distorted testimonies.
Several of these cases
are now in the hands of Sergio Moro, a Curitiba-based judge who has
become a nationwide celebrity thanks to his willingness to imprison rich
and powerful people who were previously able to enjoy impunity. Moro
has a reputation for working quickly and ignoring reputations. Many of
Lula’s family members and friends fear Moro will soon put the former
president on trial.
Lula claims he faces the prospect with equanimity because he believes in the Brazilian justice system.
“There is nobody in
Brazil who is as tranquil as me,” he says. “If I face trial, we’ll know
whether [the allegations against me] are true or not.”
At 70 years of age, the
Brazilian Workers’ party founder may feel he has earned the right to be
sanguine. He has experienced far worse. He was brought up in such abject
poverty that he sometimes lacked enough to eat as a child. His brother
was jailed and tortured during the dictatorship era. He fought alongside
British miners in their failed challenge to Margaret Thatcher in the
1980s. He lost three presidential elections before a historic win in
2002. More recently, he underwent chemotherapy for throat cancer.
Despite the legal Sword
of Damocles hanging over him, Lula feels his place in history is secure.
“The major achievements of the past 13 years will not be lost whether
I’m on trial or not,” he says. “I don’t plan to change what I am. I was
the best [president] ever.”
Brasil 247

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