Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Great-Power Talk, Broken Cities: Brazil's Angry Response To A German Remark


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) (Op-ed Analysis) Germany's chancellor Friedrich Merz delivered one clumsy line about Belém to a Berlin business audience – and Brazil's political class turned it into a national drama.

The reaction says as much about Brazil's fragile self-image as it does about the self-confidence of a wealthy, orderly Germany.

In his speech to the German Trade Congress, Merz praised Germany as“one of the most beautiful countries in the world” and recalled asking journalists who had followed him to COP-30 in Belém whether any of them would like to stay.

Nobody raised a hand; all, he said, were glad to return from“that place we had just visited.” It was a typically blunt, slightly smug German anecdote, the kind that plays well in a domestic room and not at all abroad.

In Brasília, however, the response quickly escalated. Senator Zequinha Marinho pushed through a formal vote of censure in the Senate, accusing Merz of xenophobic and prejudiced remarks against Belém and the Brazilian people, and declaring that the Amazon is“patrimony of humanity.”

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva chose a friendlier tone but the same defensive reflex: he joked that the German leader should have gone to a bar in Pará, danced, and tasted maniçoba, insisting that Berlin cannot offer“10% of the quality” of Belém and the state of Pará.



What disappears in this theater is the obvious: Belém is a hot, chaotic, unequal Amazon port city that struggles with basic infrastructure.
COP-30 exposes Brazil's infrastructure gaps
For COP-30, Brazil is spending heavily on roads, public spaces and the conference venue, yet hotel capacity is still far below the expected 45,000–50,000 visitors, prices have exploded and the government is improvising with cruise ships and temporary accommodation.

Foreigners are not imagining the difficulties; they are living them. The real question is whether Brazil wants honest feedback or only flattery. Many will see in Merz's remark an ill-phrased but fundamentally truthful observation that many visitors share.

The left-leaning establishment, instead of using this moment to confront urban decay and planning failures, rallied around symbolic outrage and parliamentary censure.

For a country that insists on being treated as a serious global power, acting as a permanently offended ex-colony is a strange way to prove the point.

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The Rio Times

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