Thursday, March 27, 2025 - Brazil’s former president, Jair Bolsonaro will stand trial for allegedly orchestrating a coup to seize power through a military coup, after the country’s supreme court decided he should face criminal prosecution.
The ruling
leaves the far-right politician, who governed Brazil from 2019 until the end of
2022, facing a possible jail sentence of more than 40 years.
The
supreme court decided that seven other close allies of the ex-president should
also stand trial for crimes including involvement in an armed criminal
organization, coup d’état and violently attempting to abolish Brazilian
democracy.
They are:
Bolsonaro’s former defense ministers Gen Walter Braga Netto and Gen Paulo
Sérgio Nogueira de Oliveira; his former navy commander, Adm Almir Garnier
Santos; his former security minister, Anderson Torres; his former spy chief
Alexandre Ramagem; his former minister for institutional security, Gen Augusto
Heleno; and his former assistant, Lt Col Mauro Cid, who, if convicted, will
receive a lighter sentence after he struck a plea deal with prosecutors.
The men
are accused of forming a conspiracy to keep Bolsonaro in power after he
narrowly lost the 2022 presidential election to his leftwing rival, Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva.
On
Wednesday five supreme court judges unanimously ruled that there was sufficient
evidence for all of those men to face prosecution and officially declared them
defendants.
The
accusations relate to an alleged plan to stage a pro-Bolsonaro coup in the
months between the October 2022 election and the far-right riots that broke out
in Brasília on 8 January 2023 – one week after Lula’s inauguration.
Those
attacks were allegedly incited as part of a last-ditch attempt to return
Bolsonaro to the presidency, against the public will, by creating turmoil that
would justify a military intervention.
“It was a
veritable pitched battle … It was an extraordinarily violent attempted coup
d’état,” the supreme court judge Alexandre de Moraes told the court as he
showed video footage of Bolsonarista hooligans vandalizing the supreme court
and attacking police in the capital.
“Untamed
violence – utter insolence … These images leave no doubt as to the materiality
and the gravity of the crimes committed,” Moraes added.
In the
weeks and months before the rightwing rampage in Brasília, Police claim one
sub-plot – code-named “Green and Yellow Dagger” – included plans to cause
social and political chaos by assassinating Lula with poison and shooting the
supreme court judge Moraes dead.
Brazil’s
attorney general, Paulo Gonet, told the court that police investigators had
“uncovered a terrifying operation to carry out the coup, which even included
killing the president and vice-president-elect, as well as that of a supreme
court minister”.
One
assassination plot “envisaged using explosives, military ordnance and poison …
[and] the operators only didn’t follow through on what had been agreed because
they didn’t manage to … co-opt the commander of the army,” Gonet added, urging
judges to put Bolsonaro and his alleged accomplices on trial.
In a
written statement after Wednesday’s ruling, Bolsonaro claimed he was the victim
of judicial persecution designed to end his political career and silence
Brazil’s rightwing opposition.
“Those
in power are focused on ensuring I spend the rest of my life in prison so I can
never run for president again,” he wrote.
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