Brazil's Lula to be President Rousseff's chief of staff
- 55 minutes ago
- From the section Latin America & Caribbean
Brazil's former President, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, will become the new chief of staff for current President Dilma Rousseff.
The move shields Lula from possible prosecution by a federal judge investigating a massive corruption scandal named Operation Car Wash. But Ms Rousseff said that was not the motivation for the appointment.
"Lula's arrival in my government strengthens it and there are people who don't want it to be stronger."
Under Brazilian law, cabinet members can only be tried by the Supreme Court.
He says the allegations are aimed at preventing him from running for president again in 2018.
During his time in office, the Brazilian economy experienced unprecedented economic growth and wealth redistribution.
"I believe [former] President Lula, who was in charge of the country for eight years, cannot have his reputation destroyed in this manner," added Ms Rousseff.
Hours after the announcement, protesters gathered outside the Presidential Palace in Brasilia and in at least three other cities.
In Congress, opposition politicians gathered around a microphone during a chaotic session and chanted "resignation".
Lula in the spotlight
- What the scandal is about
- What has gone wrong in Brazil?
- Profile: Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
- Lula: The most hated and loved man in Brazil
Fight against impeachment
Lula flew to the capital, Brasilia, on Tuesday for talks with President Rousseff. After a four-hour meeting, they agreed to reconvene on Wednesday.Lawmaker Jose Guimaraes of the governing Workers' Party, to which both Lula and President Rousseff belong, tweeted (in Portuguese) that current chief of staff Jaques Wagner had "shown greatness and selflessness on the day of his birthday" and ceded his post to Lula.
The former leader's appointment was confirmed later in a statement issued by Ms Rousseff.
Lula and other ministers appointed on Wednesday are expected to be sworn in at 10:00 local time (13:00 GMT) on Thursday.
As chief of staff, Lula is expected to lead the fight against moves in Congress to impeach President Rousseff over allegations she manipulated Brazil's account books to hide a growing deficit.
Analysts say President Rousseff is hoping that Lula will use his political nous and influence with members of Congress to block impeachment proceedings.
Lula: 'Man of the people'
- Born 27 October 1945 into a poor, illiterate family in Pernambuco state
- Worked in Sao Paulo's car industry
- Achieved national fame leading strikes during Brazil's dictatorship
- In 1980 he founded the Workers' Party (PT), the first major socialist party in Brazil's history
- Elected president in 2002 at the fourth attempt and went on to serve two terms
- Pumped billions of dollars into social programmes such as Bolsa Familia that benefited tens of millions of Brazilians
- When he left office in 2010 he said: "I am leaving government to live life on the streets. Man of the people that I always was, I will be more of the people than ever before"
- Currently under investigation over his deals with construction firms
On 4 March, Lula was briefly detained and questioned over allegations of money laundering connected to Operation Car Wash, a massive investigation into corruption at the state oil giant, Petrobras.
Prosecutors have since filed fraud and money laundering charges against him. However, the charges have yet to be accepted by a judge.
The case has been transferred to federal judge Sergio Moro, who is in charge of Operation Car Wash.
But if Lula is confirmed as a cabinet member, Judge Moro will not be able to investigate or try him.
Lula has consistently denied any wrongdoing and alleges the allegations are politically motivated.
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