Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

After Bolsonaro's Arrest, A U.S. Embassy Broadside Tests Brazil's Judiciary


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The sudden transfer of former president Jair Bolsonaro from house arrest to a Federal Police cell turned a Brazilian court fight into an international clash.

It now pits a powerful and controversial judge in Brasília against an openly hostile Washington. This comes just as President Lula is seeking a softer line from the Trump administration on tariffs.

On 22 November, Supreme Court justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered Bolsonaro out of his home in Brasília and into jail.

Bolsonaro had been in preventive detention there, under electronic monitoring, after receiving a 27-year sentence linked to his attempt to stay in power after the 2022 election.

Moraes pointed to two risks: reports that Bolsonaro burned and damaged his ankle monitor with a soldering iron, and plans for a night vigil by supporters outside his gated community, a short drive from the US Embassy.

Bolsonaro says he never tried to escape. In a custody hearing, he claimed a“psychotic attack” caused by antidepressants and painkillers.




After Bolsonaro's Arrest, A U.S. Embassy Broadside Tests Brazil's Judiciary
He said he hallucinated that the device was bugged. A court video shows him telling an officer he put a hot soldering iron on the anklet“out of curiosity”.

Critics see a clumsy excuse. His camp sees a harsh reaction by a judge who already dominates Brazil's politics.

The real explosion came from Washington. US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau posted on X that Moraes is“a sanctioned human rights abuser” who dragged Brazil's Supreme Court into“shame and international discredit”.

He called Bolsonaro's jailing“provocative and unnecessary” and warned that“nothing is more dangerous to democracy than a judge who knows no limits on his power”.

Within hours, the US Embassy in Brazil reposted the message in Portuguese, almost word for word. That gave the attack full diplomatic weight.

The statement spread fast through X, Instagram, TikTok and TV talk shows. Some commentators hailed a defence of basic freedoms. Others saw blunt interference in a sovereign court case.

This is not an isolated outburst. For months, the Trump administration has piled pressure on Brazil's judiciary.

It imposed human-rights sanctions on Moraes, later extended to his wife and a family-linked institute.

It also raised tariffs on Brazilian exports, then partially rolled them back after talks with President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Moraes' aggressive move does not make Brazil look like a grateful partner, but rather a vengeful one. For Brazil, the case is now about more than one polarising ex-president.

It has become a test of how far a single judge can push in high-stakes political trials, and how much outside pressure a major democracy is willing to accept on its courts.

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The Rio Times

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