Brazil’s ex-president Bolsonaro charged in alleged coup plot

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FILE PHOTO: Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro accompanied by his wife Michelle Bolsonaro (not pictured) arrive at Brasilia International Airport, as she departs for the inauguration of U.S. President Donald Trump, in Brasilia, Brazil, January 18, 2025. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino/File Photo

Former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro has repeatedly denied breaking any laws and calls the allegations against him a witch hunt.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro was charged on Feb 18 with

leading a plot to overthrow the government

and undermine the country’s 40-year-old democracy after his 2022 election loss, complicating his narrow chances of a political comeback.

The charges come after a two-year police investigation into the election-denying movement that culminated in riots by Bolsonaro supporters in the capital in early 2023, a week after President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva took office.

Prosecutor-general Paulo Gonet charged the far-right firebrand and his running mate, General Walter Braga Netto, with leading a “criminal organisation” that wanted to create a new order in the country, including with plans to poison Mr Lula.

A total of 34 people were charged in the plot, including several military officials, such as Bolsonaro’s former national security adviser, retired general Augusto Heleno, and former navy commander Almir Garnier Santos, according to the charge sheet.

“The responsibility for acts harmful to the democratic order falls upon a criminal organisation led by Jair Messias Bolsonaro, based on an authoritarian project of power,” it said.

Lawyers representing Bolsonaro said in a Feb 18 statement that he never supported any movement aimed at dismantling Brazil’s democratic rule of law or the institutions that uphold it.

Analysts consider it unlikely that Bolsonaro will be arrested before his trial unless Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who is overseeing the case, deems him a flight risk.

The case echoes the criminal charges faced by US President Donald Trump that accused him of seeking to overturn his re-election loss in 2020. That case was repeatedly delayed and ultimately dropped after Mr Trump was returned to power in the November 2024 US election.

A plot to take control

“They sought total control over the Three Powers Plaza; they outlined a central office that would serve the purpose of organising the new order they intended to establish,” the charging document said.

Bolsonaro, a former army captain, has repeatedly denied breaking any laws and calls the allegations against him a witch hunt by his political opponents.

Meanwhile, Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, the former president’s son, in a post on social media platform X on Feb 18 derided the charges as an “unconstitutional and immoral mission to attend to Alexandre de Moraes’ whims and Lula’s nefarious interest”.

The indictment on Feb 18 marks the first time Bolsonaro has been charged with a crime, though he has faced several legal challenges to his conduct as president since he lost his re-election bid.

Two previous decisions by Brazil’s Federal Electoral Court have already blocked him from running for president until 2030.

Bolsonaro’s defence has two weeks to respond to the charges before the Supreme Court decides whether it will accept the charges and potentially hold a dramatic, televised trial.

If convicted, Bolsonaro faces at least a dozen years behind bars.

Dimming comeback hopes

“There’s a 99 per cent chance that the Supreme Court will accept the charges,” said Ms Vera Chemim, a constitutional lawyer in Sao Paulo. “But to convict Bolsonaro, the Supreme Court will need robust evidence.”

Bolsonaro’s former running mate Netto was arrested two months ago, after police accused him of interfering in the investigations. In a statement late on Feb 18, his lawyers called the charges a “fantasy” that will not erase his “unblemished history” over four decades of service in the Brazilian Army.

A lawyer for former navy chief Garnier Santos said he will comment once he had fully reviewed the charges, while a lawyer for general Heleno did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A Supreme Court conviction could mark an insurmountable obstacle to Bolsonaro’s hopes to run in the 2026 presidential election, in a potential rematch against Mr Lula.

A 2010 law that Bolsonaro himself voted to pass when he was a member of Congress bars anyone convicted by an appeals court from running for office.

Two sources close to Bolsonaro said the former president has little hope that the courts will rule in his favour. Instead, his allies hope to mobilise political support to increase the pressure on courts and lawmakers to clear a path for a comeback.

On Feb 18, hours before prosecutors presented the charges against him, Bolsonaro met opposition senators to discuss a Bill that would lower the length of time politicians are barred from elections if they commit irregularities.

While its prospects for passage are unclear, some conservatives are emboldened by Mr Lula’s unpopularity, according to recent polls.

A February survey released by Datafolha showed that only 24 per cent of Brazilians approve of Mr Lula’s government, his lowest-ever rating in any of his three terms as president. REUTERS

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