Brazilians Rally to Support Embattled President Brazilians protested in support of President Dilma
Rousseff who is facing impeachment amid a failing economy and corruption
scandals.
7 Photos
1. Protesters rally in support of Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff in Rio de Janeiro on March 31, 2016. Thousands
of Brazilians in 17 states and the nation's capital took to the streets
in defense of beleaguered President Dilma Rousseff on Thursday.
Rousseff is currently facing impeachment proceedings as her government
faces a stalling national economy and multiple corruption scandals.
RICARDO MORAES / Reuters
2. A demonstrator wearing a presidential sash
and a mask depicting Brazil's former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
attends a protest in support of Lula da Silva and Brazil's President
Dilma Rousseff in Sao Paulo on March 31. The former president has been
linked to a sprawling corruption scandal involving Brazilian oil giant
Petrobras.
Andre Penner / AP
3. A woman holds a doll in the air during a rally in Rio de Janeiro. Rousseff
could lose power as soon as May if the lower house of Congress approves
her impeachment. She has pledged to fight the charges brought by the
opposition of irregularities in the government budget designed to favor
her reelection in 2014.
4. Unionists and Worker's Party (PT) supporters demonstrate in Sao Paulo. NELSON ALMEIDA / AFP - Getty Images
5. People chant as they protest in Rio de Janeiro. RICARDO MORAES / Reuters
6. A demonstrator holds a Brazilian flag with stickers in support of the president in Sao Paulo. Andre Penner / AP
7. Supporters of President Dilma Rousseff
protest outside Lisbon University in Portugal where senators opposed to
her were speaking.
ssTv UserPeople demonstrate in support of President Dilma Rousseff in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, March 31, 2016. (Photo by AFP)
Tens of thousands of people rally across Brazil in support of President Dilma Rousseff, amid ongoing calls for her impeachment. Protesters
took to the streets in 31 cities, including the capital, Brasilia, on
Thursday. According to police, at least 25,000 to 30,000 people marched
in Brasilia alone. Rousseff will be removed from power later this
month if Brazil’s lower house of parliament votes for her impeachment.
Her opponents accuse her of manipulating government accounts for her own
benefit during her 2014 re-election campaign. She denies the charge. The president said on Thursday that her opponents were manipulating the country’s young democracy. “During
the process that the whole of Latin America lived through in the 60s,
70s and 80s, the form of coup was a military intervention. Now it is a
form of hidden coup, behind apparent democratic processes. They use bits
of democracy, but not democracy as a whole,” she said. People demonstrate in support of President Dilma Rousseff in Porto Alegre, Brazil, March 31, 2016. (Photo by AFP)Her
supporters in the capital held banners with the writing “There will not
be a coup” on them. Around 5,000 people gathered in Rio de Janeiro and
held a large banner with the word “Democracy” printed on it. A
50-year-old shopkeeper said he attended a demonstration in Sao Paulo
because “the opposition wants to push Dilma from power to end the
people’s government.” Rousseff was first elected president of
Brazil in 2010. Her government is now facing, among other
challenges, many economic road bumps, including high inflation,
unemployment, recession and a financial deficit. A graft scandal
involving the country’s state oil company Petrobras has also caused
trouble for the 68-year-old Brazilian leader, who headed the company
before she took office as president in 2010. She has also poured
oil on the fire by appointing former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
as her chief of staff. Silva is himself implicated in the Petrobras
corruption scandal, and his appointment by Rousseff has been interpreted
as an attempt to grant him immunity from prosecution. On
Thursday, the Supreme Court ruled to remove Lula’s case from the
jurisdiction of a lower court judge and to move it to the top court. The
ruling came after crusading anti-corruption judge Sergio Moro released a
wiretapped conversation purportedly between Rousseff and Lula that is
said to have provided evidence that the president tried to protect Lula
with the appointment. It is not clear how the conversations of the
president of Brazil were eavesdropped on. Moro has made a written
apology for releasing the conversation and violating the right to
privacy of the purported individuals in the conversation.