person:dilma rousseff

  • Red Globo se disculpa por mentir acerca de D.Rousseff y Lula Da Silva | Red Filosófica del Uruguay
    https://redfilosoficadeluruguay.wordpress.com/2017/05/22/red-globo-se-disculpa-por-mentir-acerca-de-d-rous

    La cadena Globo presentó sus disculpas por una información errónea sobre cuentas en el extranjero de los ex presidentes Lula Da Silva y Dilma Rousseff. El conductor William Waak dijo en la TV Globo que debía ser corregido “un dato impreciso que hemos dado” en el Jornal Nacional, el noticiero con mayor audiencia desde hace medio siglo. Ese noticiero mantiene una guerra de baja intensidad informativa que fue denunciada por el propio Lula en su reciente audiencia ante el juez Sergio Moro.

    • La chaîne Globo s’est excusée pour les informations erronées concernant les comptes à l’étranger d’anciens présidents Lula Da Silva et Dilma Rousseff. Le chef d’orchestre William Waak a déclaré à la télévision Globo qu’il fallait corriger « les données inexactes que nous avons données » dans Jornal Nacional, le journal télévisé ayant le plus grand auditoire depuis un demi-siècle. Ce programme d’information entretient une guerre de faible intensité informative qui a été dénoncée par Lula lui-même lors de sa récente audition devant le juge Sergio Moro.

    • Ce qui laisse pantois dans la posture assumée par plusieurs capitales européennes – Berne se maintient pour sa part neutre –, c’est l’emballement à qualifier de « non légitime » le pouvoir en place à Caracas. Alors que ces gouvernements ne cessent de signer des accords commerciaux et militaires avec des régimes qui n’ont pas une once de fonctionnement démocratique. Cela sans oublier leur silence assourdissant lors des renversements de Dilma Rousseff au Brésil, de Manuel Zelaya au Honduras ou de Fernando Lugo au Paraguay.

    • On peut ajouter que l’élection (il s’agit de sa réélection l’année dernière avec entrée en fonction le 10 janvier 2019) de Maduro est peut-être contestable, elle n’est pas illégitime. D’autant plus qu’à l’époque l’opposition s’était – encore une fois – déchirée, n’arrivant pas à organiser un boycott unanime…

      Le véritable coup d’état a eu lieu en août 2017 (cf. mon historique de la crise actuelle https://seenthis.net/messages/755401 ) et à l’époque, les gouvernements occidentaux avaient simplement appelé la Constituante, élue de façon contestable, avec cette fois un boycott total de l’opposition, mais surtout totalement illégitime à s’auto-attribuer les pouvoirs de l’Assemblée nationale, à – justement ! – respecter les accords existants…

  • A Letter to #Brazil, From a Friend Living Under Duterte | The Nation
    https://www.thenation.com/article/brazil-bolsonaro-duterte-fascism-resistance

    Dear friends:

    I’m writing to you on the eve of your going to the polls to determine the future of your wonderful country.

    I think it’s no exaggeration to say that the fate of Brazil hangs in the balance. It’s also hardly hyperbole to assert that the election will have massive geopolitical significance, since if Brazil votes for Jair Bolsonaro, the extreme right will have come to power in the Western Hemisphere’s two biggest countries. Like many of you, I’m hoping for a miracle that will prevent Bolsonaro from coming to power.

    When I visited Rio and São Paulo in 2015, I observed that the political rallies mounted by the opposition to then-President Dilma Rousseff contained a small but vocal fringe element calling for a return to military rule. Little did I suspect then that that fringe would expand into a massive electoral movement in support of a self-proclaimed advocate of strongman rule.
    The Amazing Twins

    It’s amazing to many of us here in the Philippines how similar Bolsonaro is to our president, Rodrigo Duterte.

    Duterte has spoken about how he wished he’d raped a dead female missionary. Bolsonaro told a fellow member of parliament that she didn’t deserve to be raped by him. Duterte has spoken in admiration of our dead dictator Ferdinand Marcos and decreed his burial at our heroes’ cemetery. Bolsonaro has depicted the military rule in Brazil over three decades ago as a golden age.

    A friend asked me a few days ago, only partly in jest, “Is there a virus going around that produces horrible boils like Bolsonaro and Duterte?” I thought about her metaphor and thought there was something to it, but rather than being the result of a communicable disease, I think that authoritarian figures emerge from internal suppuration in the body politic.

  • #Brésil, la responsabilité du #centre...

    Centrists paved the way for the far right in Brazil

    To understand Jair Bolsonaro’s rise, we need to look at centrists’ reckless efforts to exploit institutional meltdown.

    Barring an unprecedented upset, the far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro will be elected president of Brazil this Sunday with a comfortable margin over his runoff opponent, the Workers’ Party’s (PT) Fernando Haddad. This will crown a stunning run by the first-time candidate that saw his party, the formerly minuscule Social Liberal Party (PSL), jump from one to 52 federal representatives, propel a number of unknowns to success in the gubernatorial elections and place allies and relatives of Bolsonaro among the most voted across the country.

    So how did a candidate with a well-documented history of openly anti-democratic, racist, misogynistic, homophobic remarks, with very little by way of specified policies other than the promise of being a law-and-order hardman who will “banish the reds” and stop the country’s “moral degradation”, come to sweep the board like that?

    These were always going to be the most anti-systemic elections in Brazilian history. Since 2013, the country’s political system has been haemorrhaging legitimacy owing to widely perceived lack of accountability, a crippling economic crisis and an endlessly ramifying corruption scandal involving all major parties. A series of desperate attempts have been made to protect the establishment and steady the boat, not least throwing former president Dilma Rousseff overboard in a highly dubious impeachment. They have only managed to create more instability and fragilise institutions even further - not least the judiciary, whose erratic interventions have made it look partisan and weak at once.

    It is ironic that Bolsonaro, a member of parliament for 27 years, who has been named in corruption investigations and is supported by some of the shiftiest sectors of Brazilian politics, could successfully present himself as the anti-systemic candidate. In order to understand his rise, we need to look beyond PT’s undeniable mistakes to how the centre right, in its reckless efforts to create instability and exploit institutional meltdown, has endangered the country’s democracy and paved the way for the far right.

    In 1994, the Brazilian party system hit upon a formula. While the bulk of it remained an amorphous mass of less than public interests, low on ideological commitment but with very expensive habits, two parties had the cadre, ideas and prestige to marshal this gelatinous blob into opposing blocs: the Workers’ Party on the centre left and the Social Democrats (PSDB) on the centre right. Elections were fought between the armies regimented by the two; whoever won took most of the other’s side as spoil.

    The seeds of the far right’s rise started to be sown in the early 2000s, when PT rode the global commodity boom to promote an economic bonanza that raised the standards of living for the poorest while also benefiting the rich. Lula’s success made it impossible for opponents to claim that PT wasn’t working; the country was unequivocally better off than it had been under PSDB. The only available route of attack lay in exploiting moral concerns around elements of PT’s agenda, like women’s and LGBT rights, and reheated Cold War “red scares”. In this, the centre right had support from major media groups and political leaders from the growing Brazilian Pentecostal community, whose electoral profile is essentially tied to moral issues. The more immoderate elements of this tacit alliance were increasingly brought into an echo chamber in which paranoid claims and bogus accusations would be dignified with comments by opposition politicians and media pundits, and thus fed back into a few news cycles until everyone moved on to the next fabricated outrage. An editorial market for anachronistic anti-communist propaganda boomed. Inevitably, this opened the door of mainstream debate, and of centre right parties themselves, to the far right.

    PT, in turn, invariably chose negotiation over conflict, trusting that its popular support would always allow it to buy adversaries off and prevent PSDB from reconstituting its bloc. This meant avoiding direct confrontation with the media, a highly unregulated sector that PT had always vowed to democratise, and building an alliance with the Pentecostal right, which included watering down its own progressive agenda. This, of course, only furthered the far right’s mainstream penetration.

    Things changed in 2005, when a scheme of parliamentary bribes opened a new line of attack: the message now was that PT was “the most corrupt party of all times” - a tough bar to clear in Brazilian politics. Centre-right leaders believed that letting the scandal run its course would return them to office in 2006, but they were wrong. Lula recovered, won re-election and elected his successor, Rousseff, twice.

    After the Petrobras scandal broke in 2014, however, with the economy already in a tailspin and dissatisfaction with the political class as a whole on the rise, PT was against the ropes like never before. This is why, in 2016, PSDB decided not to run the risk of allowing another comeback. Rather than wait for the elections, they joined a rising hard right and PT’s coalition partner, MDB, in a parliamentary manoeuvre to oust president Rousseff. Among those in the political, business and media establishment who supported the move, the calculation was obvious: having led the opposition for 13 years, and having come close to winning in 2014, PSDB was a shoo-in for the 2018 race.

    Except they were wrong again. First, they mistook the rising anti-systemic sentiment for a rejection of PT only. Secondly, they failed to consider how much that sentiment would be compounded by the sorry spectacle of the impeachment itself, and the nature of the government it put in place - which passed a number of draconian austerity measures and had a cabinet like a corruption all-star team. So unpopular was it, in fact, that it ended up being a boost to PT, which recovered some of its support in the comparison. This was, in fact, the reason why Lula’s trial was fast-tracked - the establishment’s assumption again being that, with the former president out of the race, the PSDB candidate would have an easy ride. Fatefully, it was also what triggered PT’s decision to field a candidate rather than support one from a less rejected centre-left party.

    What the centre right did not realise was that they were no longer driving in the right lane on their own: they were now competing with a force much better positioned to not only ride the anti-systemic tide, but to reap a number of seeds that they had sown.

    The anti-corruption campaign that led to Rousseff’s downfall had turned against key MDB and PSDB figures; both parties have lost almost half their seats in parliament. The style of agitation fostered in the early 2000s, based on moral panics and “red scares”, had developed a life on its own on the internet and on WhatsApp groups. Whereas the procedure in the past was for media pundits and politicians to lend these stories a measure of respectability, these figures of authority themselves had now become targets. It is not uncommon to see people justify their vote for Bolsonaro with the fear of a communist dictatorship or that public schools are turning children gay, and to accuse the whole establishment of being in on the plot. Meanwhile, the Pentecostal right has rallied behind Bolsonaro, and Record, a media conglomerate owned by one of the country’s biggest evangelical churches, is angling to be to him what Fox is to Donald Trump. Ironic, no doubt, when one remembers how much Globo, the country’s biggest media corporation since the 1960s, actively supported Rousseff’s impeachment and minimised the anti-Bolsonaro protests that swept the country before the first round of the elections.

    In the end, no amount of judicial interventions and open support from financial markets could do the trick: PSDB’s Geraldo Alckmin took less than five percent of the vote. The party, whose founders came out of the struggle against the military dictatorship, has declared neutrality in the runoff, as have most others, despite the many worrying antidemocratic signs coming from Bolsonaro and his camp.

    A Bolsonaro government will be a recomposition of the country’s elite, bringing formerly bit-part players centre stage, but certainly not the clean break his voters imagine. It will continue the socially regressive policies of the outgoing Temer government, hitting the poor hard and stifling social mobility for a generation. The realities of building a parliamentary majority will no doubt contradict his anti-corruption discourse. It is unclear how long Bolsonaro will manage to be all things to all people, which raises fears that he might amplify the more belligerent and autocratic elements of his persona as compensation. There have been several cases of violence against journalists, LGBT people and left-wing supporters since the election’s first round, and Bolsonaro’s discourse continues to court political violence explicitly.

    As for the political and economic establishment, which until now had in PSDB their natural representatives, it has largely signalled that it is prepared to roll with the new times. Markets have been elated since Bolsonaro took the lead; industrialists have started flocking to him. When a case of electoral fraud with the potential to annul the elections emerged - businessmen had been paying for bulk “fake news” messages supporting Bolsonaro on WhatsApp - most of the media and the electoral court dealt with the case in cool, muted terms. This only strengthened the impression that the same forces that moved to impeach Rousseff have made already made their choice.

    The assumption is clearly that Bolsonaro will be willing to outsource key areas of policy to them and that his antidemocratic tendencies can be controlled; that trying to tame his disruption is better than risking another centre-left comeback. A dangerous gamble, no doubt, considering both who the candidate is and the fact that it was exactly that kind of logic that brought them, and the country, to this situation.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/centrists-paved-brazil-181023095033241.html
    #Bolsonaro #extrême_droite
    via @isskein

  • The Rise and Fall of the Latin American Left | The Nation
    https://www.thenation.com/article/the-ebb-and-flow-of-latin-americas-pink-tide

    Conservatives now control Latin America’s leading economies, but the region’s leftists can still look to Uruguay for direction.
    By Omar G. Encarnación, May 9, 2018

    Last December’s election of Sebastián Piñera, of the National Renewal party, to the Chilean presidency was doubly significant for Latin American politics. Coming on the heels of the rise of right-wing governments in Argentina in 2015 and Brazil in 2016, Piñera’s victory signaled an unmistakable right-wing turn for the region. For the first time since the 1980s, when much of South America was governed by military dictatorship, the continent’s three leading economies are in the hands of right-wing leaders.

    Piñera’s election also dealt a blow to the resurrection of the Latin American left in the post–Cold War era. In the mid-2000s, at the peak of the so-called Pink Tide (a phrase meant to suggest the surge of leftist, noncommunist governments), Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Ecuador, and Bolivia, or three-quarters of South America’s population (some 350 million people), were under left-wing rule. By the time the Pink Tide reached the mini-state of Mexico City, in 2006, and Nicaragua, a year later (culminating in the election of Daniel Ortega as president there), it was a region-wide phenomenon.

    It’s no mystery why the Pink Tide ran out of steam; even before the Chilean election, Mexican political scientist Jorge Castañeda had already declared it dead in The New York Times. Left-wing fatigue is an obvious factor. It has been two decades since the late Hugo Chávez launched the Pink Tide by toppling the political establishment in the 1998 Venezuelan presidential election. His Bolivarian revolution lives on in the hands of his handpicked successor, Nicolás Maduro, but few Latin American governments regard Venezuela’s ravaged economy and diminished democratic institutions as an inspiring model. In Brazil, the Workers’ Party, or PT, was in power for 14 years, from 2002 through 2016, first under its founder, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, between 2003 and 2011, and then under his successor and protégée, Dilma Rousseff, from 2011 to 2016. The husband-and-wife team of Néstor Kirchner and Cristina Fernández de Kirchner of the Peronist Party governed Argentina from 2003 to 2015. Socialist Michelle Bachelet had two nonconsecutive terms in office in Chile, from 2006 to 2010 and from 2014 to 2018.

    Economic turmoil and discontent is another culprit. As fate would have it, the Pink Tide coincided with one of the biggest economic expansions in Latin American history. Its engine was one of the largest commodities booms in modern times. Once the boom ended, in 2012—largely a consequence of a slowdown in China’s economy—economic growth in Latin America screeched to a halt. According to the International Monetary Fund, since 2012 every major Latin American economy has underperformed relative to the previous 10 years, with some economies, including that of Brazil, the region’s powerhouse, experiencing their worst recession in decades. The downturn reined in public spending and sent the masses into the streets, making it very difficult for governments to hang on to power.

    Meanwhile, as the commodity boom filled states’ coffers, leftist politicians became enmeshed in the same sorts of corrupt practices as their conservative predecessors. In April, Lula began serving a 12-year prison sentence for having accepted bribes in exchange for government contracts while in office. His prosecution, which in principle guarantees that he will not be a candidate in this year’s presidential race, was the high point of Operation Car Wash, the biggest anti-corruption dragnet in Brazilian history. Just after leaving office, in 2015, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner was indicted for fraud for conspiring with her former public-works secretary, José López, to steal millions of federal dollars intended for roadwork in Argentina. The “nuns and guns” scandal riveted the country, with the arrest of a gun-toting López as he hurled bags stuffed with millions of dollars over the walls of a Catholic convent in a suburb of Buenos Aires. In Chile, Bachelet left office under a cloud of suspicion. Her family, and by extension Bachelet herself, is accused of illegal real-estate transactions that netted millions of dollars.

    All this said, largely overlooked in obituaries of the Pink Tide is the right-wing backlash that it provoked. This backlash aimed to reverse the shift in power brought on by the Pink Tide—a shift away from the power brokers that have historically controlled Latin America, such as the military, the Catholic Church, and the oligarchy, and toward those sectors of society that have been marginalized: women, the poor, sexual minorities, and indigenous peoples. Rousseff’s impeachment in 2016 perfectly exemplifies the retaliation organized by the country’s traditional elites. Engineered by members of the Brazilian Congress, a body that is only 11 percent female and has deep ties to industrial barons, rural oligarchs, and powerful evangelical pastors, the impeachment process was nothing short of a patriarchal coup.

    In a 2017 interview, Rousseff made note of the “very misogynist element in the coup against me.… They accused me of being overly tough and harsh, while a man would have been considered firm, strong. Or they would say I was too emotional and fragile, when a man would have been considered sensitive.” In support of her case, Rousseff pointed out that previous Brazilian presidents committed the same “crime” she was accused of (fudging the national budget to hide deficits at reelection time), without any political consequence. As if to underscore the misogyny, Rousseff’s successor, Michel Temer, came into office with an all-male cabinet.

    In assessing the impact of the Pink Tide, there is a tendency to bemoan its failure to generate an alternative to neoliberalism. After all, the Pink Tide rose out of the discontent generated by the economic policies championed by the United States and international financial institutions during the 1990s, such as privatizations of state enterprises, austerity measures, and ending economic protectionism. Yet capitalism never retreated in most of Latin America, and US economic influence remains for the most part unabated. The only significant dent on the neoliberal international order made by the Pink Tide came in 2005, when a massive wave of political protests derailed the George W. Bush administration’s plan for a Free Trade Area of the Americas, or FTAA. If enacted, this new trade pact would have extended the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) to all countries in the Americas save for Cuba, or 34 nations in total.

    But one shouldn’t look at the legacy of the Pink Tide only through the lens of what might have been with respect to replacing neoliberalism and defeating US imperialism. For one thing, a good share of the Pink Tide was never anti-neoliberal or anti-imperialist. Left-wing rule in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, and Chile (what Castañeda called the “good left”) had more in common with the social-democratic governments of Western Europe, with its blend of free-market economics and commitment to the welfare state, than with Cuba’s Communist regime.

    Indeed, only in the radical fringe of the Pink Tide, especially the triumvirate of Chávez of Venezuela, Evo Morales of Bolivia, and Rafael Correa of Ecuador (the “bad left,” according to Castañeda), was the main thrust of governance anti-neoliberal and anti-imperialist. Taking Cuba as a model, these self-termed revolutionaries nationalized large sectors of the economy, reinvigorated the role of the state in redistributing wealth, promoted social services to the poor, and created interstate institutions, such as the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America, or ALBA, to promote inter-American collaboration and to challenge US hegemony.

    Second, the focus on neoliberalism and US imperialism obscures the Pink Tide’s biggest accomplishments. To be sure, the picture is far from being uniformly pretty, especially when it comes to democracy. The strong strand of populism that runs through the Pink Tide accounts for why some of its leaders have been so willing to break democratic norms. Claiming to be looking after the little guy, the likes of Chávez and Maduro have circumvented term limits and curtailed the independence of the courts and the press. But there is little doubt that the Pink Tide made Latin America more inclusive, equitable, and democratic, by, among other things, ushering in an unprecedented era of social progressivism.

    Because of the Pink Tide, women in power are no longer a novelty in Latin American politics; in 2014, female presidents ruled in Argentina, Brazil, and Chile. Their policies leave little doubt about the transformative nature of their leadership. In 2010, Fernández boldly took on the Argentine Catholic Church (then headed by present-day Pope Francis) to enact Latin America’s first ever same-sex marriage law; this was five years before same-sex marriage became the law of the land in the United States. A gender-identity law, one of the world’s most liberal, followed. It allows individuals to change their sex assigned at birth without permission from either a doctor or a judge. Yet another law banned the use of “conversion therapy” to cure same-sex attraction. Argentina’s gay-rights advances were quickly emulated by neighboring Uruguay and Brazil, kick-starting a “gay-rights revolution” in Latin America.

    Rousseff, who famously referred to herself with the gender-specific title of a presidenta, instead of the gender-neutral “president,” did much to advance the status of women in Brazilian society. She appointed women to the three most powerful cabinet positions, including chief of staff, and named the first female head of Petrobras, Brazil’s largest business corporation; during her tenure in office, a woman became chief justice of the Federal Supreme Court. Brutally tortured by the military during the 1970s, as a university student, Rousseff put human rights at the center of Brazilian politics by enacting a law that created Brazil’s first ever truth commission to investigate the abuses by the military between 1964 and 1985. She also signed laws that opened the Brazilian Army to women and that set into motion the corruption campaign that is currently roiling the Brazilian political class. These laws earned Rousseff the enmity of the military and conservatives.

    Bachelet, the last woman standing, made news when she entered office, in 2006, by naming the same number of men and women to her cabinet. After being term-limited, she became the first head of the newly established UN Women (formally known as the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women), before returning to Chile to win a second term at the presidency in 2014. During her second term, she created the Ministry of Gender Equality to address gender disparities and discrimination, and passed a law that legalized abortion in cases of rape, when there is a threat to the life of the mother, or when the fetus has a terminal condition. Less known is Bachelet’s advocacy for the environment. She weaned Chile off its dependence on hydrocarbons by building a vast network of solar- and wind-powered grids that made electricity cheaper and cleaner. She also created a vast system of national parks to protect much of the country’s forestland and coastline from development.

    Latin America’s socioeconomic transformation under the Pink Tide is no less impressive. Just before the economic downturn of 2012, Latin America came tantalizingly close to becoming a middle-class region. According to the World Bank, from 2002 to 2012, the middle class in Latin America grew every year by at least 1 percent to reach 35 percent of the population by 2013. This means that during that time frame, some 10 million Latin Americans joined the middle class every year. A consequence of this dramatic expansion of the middle class is a significant shrinking of the poor. Between 2000 and 2014, the percentage of Latin Americans living in poverty (under $4 per day) shrank from 45 to 25 percent.

    Economic growth alone does not explain this extraordinary expansion of the Latin American middle class and the massive reduction in poverty: Deliberate efforts by the government to redistribute wealth were also a key factor. Among these, none has garnered more praise than those implemented by the Lula administration, especially Bolsa Família, or Family Purse. The program channeled direct cash payments to poor families, as long as they agreed to keep their children in school and to attend regular health checkups. By 2013, the program had reached some 12 million households (50 million people), helping cut extreme poverty in Brazil from 9.7 to 4.3 percent of the population.

    Last but not least are the political achievements of the Pink Tide. It made Latin America the epicenter of left-wing politics in the Global South; it also did much to normalize democratic politics in the region. With its revolutionary movements crushed by military dictatorship, it is not surprising that the Latin American left was left for dead after the end of the Cold War. But since embracing democracy, the left in Latin America has moderated its tactics and beliefs while remaining committed to the idea that deliberate state action powered by the popular will is critical to correcting injustice and alleviating human suffering. Its achievements are a welcome antidote to the cynicism about democratic politics afflicting the American left.

    How the epoch-making legacy of the Pink Tide will fare in the hands of incoming right-wing governments is an open question. Some of the early signs are not encouraging. The Temer administration in Brazil has shown a decidedly retro-macho attitude, as suggested by its abolishment of the Ministry of Women, Racial Equality, and Human Rights (its functions were collapsed into the Ministry of Justice) and its close ties to a politically powerful evangelical movement with a penchant for homophobia. In Argentina, President Mauricio Macri has launched a “Trumpian” assault on undocumented immigrants from Bolivia, Paraguay, and Peru, blaming them for bringing crime and drugs into the country. Some political observers expect that Piñera will abridge or overturn Chile’s new abortion law.

    But there is reason for optimism. Temer and Macri have been slow to dismantle anti-poverty programs, realizing that doing so would be political suicide. This is hardly surprising, given the success of those programs. Right-wing governments have even seen fit to create anti-poverty programs of their own, such as Mexico’s Prospera. Moreover, unlike with prior ascents by the right in Latin America, the left is not being vanished to the political wilderness. Left-wing parties remain a formidable force in the legislatures of most major Latin American countries. This year alone, voters in Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia will have presidential elections, raising the prospect that a new Pink Tide might be rising. Should this new tide come in, the Latin American left would do well to reform its act and show what it has learned from its mistakes.

    Latin American leftists need not look far to find a model to emulate: Uruguay. It exemplifies the best of the Pink Tide without its excesses. Frente Amplio, or Broad Front, a coalition of left-wing parties in power since 2005, has put the country at the vanguard of social change by legalizing abortion, same-sex marriage, and, most famously, recreational marijuana. For these reasons alone, in 2013 The Economist chose “liberal and fun-loving” Uruguay for its first ever “country of the year” award.

    Less known accomplishments include being one of only two countries in Latin America that enjoy the status of “high income” (alongside Chile), reducing poverty from around 40 percent to less than 12 percent from 2005 to 2014, and steering clear of corruption scandals. According to Transparency International, Uruguay is the least corrupt country in Latin America, and ranks among the world’s 25 least corrupt nations. The country also scored a near perfect 100 in Freedom House’s 2018 ranking of civil and political freedoms, virtually tied with Canada, and far ahead of the United States and neighboring Argentina and Brazil. The payoff for this much virtue is hard to ignore. Among Latin American nations, no other country shows more satisfaction with its democracy.

    Omar G. EncarnaciónOmar G. Encarnación is a professor of political studies at Bard College and author of Out in the Periphery: Latin America’s Gay Rights Revolution.

    #politique #amérique_latine #impérialisme

  • Brésil : hors-jeu de Lula, hors-jeu démocratique.
    http://www.iris-france.org/110536-bresil-hors-jeu-de-lula-hors-jeu-democratique

    Derrière ces évènements politiques, un enjeu économique et social était présent. La crise ayant affecté le Brésil à partir de 2013 appelait deux sortes de réponse. L’une de nature économique devait s’efforcer de trouver la voie d’un retour à la croissance. L’autre sociale devait, dans l’attente, procéder à une juste répartition des efforts à consentir pour amortir les effets de la récession. La destitution de la présidente Dilma Rousseff avait pour objectif premier d’écarter toute option de partage social des sacrifices.

    Au prix d’un coup d’Etat parlementaire, les nouveaux dirigeants du pays ont pu mettre en œuvre une politique d’austérité, rabotant les acquis sociaux et l’investissement public, cédant au capital étranger les pans les plus prometteurs de l’économie nationale. Les conséquences de cette politique ont été nombreuses : 2 à 3 millions de personnes sont repassées sous le seuil de pauvreté etla délinquance a brutalement progressé. L’Etat a répondu par le biais de son armée, un jour à Brasilia, et l’autre à Rio, avec les résultats que l’on a pu constater, ceux de pompiers incendiaires.

    Restait, pour éviter tout risque de retour en arrière, à éliminer Lula. L’ex-président garde une popularité très forte dans les milieux modestes. Pour la première fois dans l’histoire du Brésil, de 2003 à 2016, la pauvreté a massivement reculé. Les jeunes noirs et les plus pauvres en général ont eu accès à l’électricité pour tous, au logement et à l’université. La mémoire de ces avancées est encore très fraîche. Lula, porté par les retombées de ses réalisations sociales, a fait campagne dans tout le Brésil depuis un an. Il est en ce moment en tête des intentions de vote, autour de 35%. En dépit des campagnes de presse, des réseaux sociaux hostiles, et des tentatives violentes d’intimidation comme il y a quelques jours, lorsque son autobus a été visé par des tireurs non-identifiés.

    Dans ce scénario qui se veut sobre et sans effusion de sang, il revenait donc à la justice de donner le coup de pied de l’âne. C’est aujourd’hui chose à peu près faite. Reste à savoir au lendemain de ces dérives démocratiques, judiciaires et morales ce qui va rester du Brésil refondé en 1988 sur les cendres d’une dictature. Toutes choses rappelant la fable du grand écrivain brésilien Machado de Assis, « O Alienista ». La Cité modelée par un apprenti sorcier se retrouve après bien des vicissitudes aux mains d’un irresponsable. Il se trouve aujourd’hui, si Lula venait à être définitivement écarté, un Aliéniste en bonne place pour le scrutin du 7 octobre. Il se nomme Jairo Bolsonaro. C’est un ancien militaire de la dictature, fier de son passé, proche des évangélistes, défenseur des valeurs traditionnelles et de la tolérance zéro à l’égard du crime. Il était avant la décision du TSF favorable à la mise sur la touche de l’ex-président Lula à plus de 20% des intentions de vote.

  • Brazil’s Democracy Pushed Into the Abyss - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/23/opinion/brazil-lula-democracy-corruption.html

    The rule of law and the independence of the judiciary are fragile achievements in many countries — and susceptible to sharp reversals.

    Brazil, the last country in the Western world to abolish slavery, is a fairly young democracy, having emerged from dictatorship just three decades ago. In the past two years, what could have been a historic advancement ― the Workers’ Party government granted autonomy to the judiciary to investigate and prosecute official corruption ― has turned into its opposite. As a result, Brazil’s democracy is now weaker than it has been since military rule ended.

    This week, that democracy may be further eroded as a three-judge appellate court decides whether the most popular political figure in the country, former President Luiz Inácio #Lula da Silva of the Workers’ Party, will be barred from competing in the 2018 presidential election, or even jailed.

    There is not much pretense that the court will be impartial. The presiding judge of the appellate panel has already praised the trial judge’s decision to convict Mr. da Silva for corruption as “technically irreproachable,” and the judge’s chief of staff posted on her Facebook page a petition calling for Mr. da Silva’s imprisonment.

    The trial judge, Sérgio Moro, has demonstrated his own partisanship on numerous occasions. He had to apologize to the Supreme Court in 2016 for releasing wiretapped conversations between Mr. da Silva and President Dilma Rousseff, his lawyer, and his wife and children. Judge Moro arranged a spectacle for the press in which the police showed up at Mr. da Silva’s home and took him away for questioning — even though Mr. da Silva had said he would report voluntarily for questioning.

    The evidence against Mr. da Silva is far below the standards that would be taken seriously in, for example, the United States’ judicial system.

    He is accused of having accepted a bribe from a big construction company, called OAS, which was prosecuted in Brazil’s “Carwash” corruption scheme. That multibillion-dollar scandal involved companies paying large bribes to officials of the state-owned oil company, Petrobras, to obtain contracts at grossly inflated prices.

    The bribe alleged to have been received by Mr. da Silva is an apartment owned by OAS. But there is no documentary evidence that either Mr. da Silva or his wife ever received title to, rented or even stayed in the apartment, nor that they tried to accept this gift.
    […]
    But this scanty evidence was enough for Judge Moro. In something that Americans might consider to be a #kangaroo_court proceeding, he sentenced Mr. da Silva to nine and a half years in prison.

  • Loi travail, #Retraites, sous-traitance : le gouvernement brésilien passe à l’offensive contre les droits sociaux
    https://www.bastamag.net/Loi-travail-retraites-sous-traitance-le-gouvernement-bresilien-passe-a-l

    Le gouvernement de Michel Temer, au pouvoir depuis la destitution l’été dernier de la présidente Dilma Rousseff, veut faire adopter une série de réformes qui portent atteinte à de nombreux acquis sociaux des travailleurs. La refonte du système des retraites, celui du code du travail – visant à faire primer l’accord d’entreprise sur la loi – et la libéralisation de la sous-traitance suscitent une vive opposition de la part des syndicats et dans la population. Une grève générale d’une ampleur inédite a été (...)

    #Décrypter

    / #Luttes_sociales, #Amériques, Quel avenir pour nos protections sociales ?, Retraites, #Inégalités, A la (...)

    #Quel_avenir_pour_nos_protections_sociales_ ?

  • BlackBerry hands over user data to help police ’kick ass,’ insider says - Technology & Science - CBC News
    http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/blackberry-taps-user-messages-1.3620186


    Cette information ne date pas d’hier mais elle a été confirmée depuis. C’est dommage pour chacun qui croyait pouvoir utiliser le DTEC50 avec sa clé privée gravée dans le hardware, mais finalement ce « service » du producteur de smartphones constitue une backdoor plutôt qu’un gain en sécurité.

    A specialized unit inside mobile firm BlackBerry has for years enthusiastically helped intercept user data — including BBM messages — to help in hundreds of police investigations in dozens of countries, a CBC News investigation reveals.

    CBC News has gained a rare glimpse inside the struggling smartphone maker’s Public Safety Operations team, which at one point numbered 15 people, and has long kept its handling of warrants and police requests for taps on user information confidential.

    A number of insiders, none of whom were authorized to speak, say that behind the scenes the company has been actively assisting police in a wide range of high profile investigations

    But unlike many other technology companies, which regularly publish transparency reports, it is not clear how many requests BlackBerry receives each year, nor the number of requests it has fulfilled.

    Insiders say, for example, that BlackBerry intercepted messages to aid investigators probing the political scandals in Brazil that are dogging suspended President Dilma Rousseff. The company also helped authenticate BBM messages in Major League Baseball’s drug investigation that saw New York Yankees star Alex Rodriguez suspended in 2014.

    #internet #communication #sécurité #surveillance #Canada

  • Brésil : dans la rue, les soutiens de Dilma Rousseff font entendre leurs voix
    RFI - Publié le 09-09-2016
    http://www.rfi.fr/ameriques/20160909-bresil-manifestation-soutiens-dilma-rousseff-michel-temer-fora

    Les Jeux paralympiques de Rio battent désormais leur plein, dans un contexte économique et politique particulièrement tendu au Brésil, après la destitution de la présidente de gauche Dilma Rousseff, et son remplacement par un gouvernement plus conservateur sous l’impulsion de l’ancien vice-président Michel Temer, qui l’a remplacée au pouvoir. Les soutiens du Parti des travailleurs sont dans la rue pour dénoncer cette situation.

    Avec notre correspondant à São Paulo, Martin Bernard

  • Noam Chomsky: Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff “Impeached by a Gang of Thieves” | Democracy Now!
    http://www.democracynow.org/2016/5/17/noam_chomsky_brazils_president_dilma_rousseff

    As protests continue in Brazil over the Legislature’s vote to suspend President Dilma Rousseff and put her on trial, Noam Chomsky notes that “we have the one leading politician who hasn’t stolen to enrich herself, who’s being impeached by a gang of thieves, who have done so. That does count as a kind of soft coup.”

  • #Brésil : Dilma Rousseff destituée, la révolution conservatrice est en marche
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/010916/bresil-dilma-rousseff-destituee-la-revolution-conservatrice-est-en-marche

    Dilma Roussef, lors de son discours devant le Sénat. © Edilson Rodrigues/Agência Senado Les sénateurs brésiliens ont définitivement voté, mercredi, la destitution de la présidente Dilma Rousseff, écartée du pouvoir depuis mai. « Aujourd’hui, je crains la mort de la démocratie », a-t-elle déclaré lors d’un discours dur et combatif. Sa sortie de scène marque l’épuisement du système mis en place par le Parti des travailleurs depuis quinze ans. Les élites conservatrices reprennent la main, le nouveau président promettant un programme ultra-libéral.

    #International #Amérique_latine #destituion #Dilma_Roussef #Lula #Michel_Temer

  • Brésil : le coup d’Etat
    Le Club de Mediapart | 14 mai 2016 Par Michael Lowy
    https://blogs.mediapart.fr/michael-lowy/blog/140516/bresil-le-coup-detat

    Appelons un chat un chat. Ce qui vient de se passer au Brésil, avec la destitution de la présidente élue, Dilma Rousseff, est un coup d’état. Coup d’état pseudo-légal, « constitutionnel », « institutionnel », parlementaire, tout ce qu’on voudra, mais coup d’état tout de même. Des parlementaires - députés et sénateurs - massivement compromis dans des affaires de corruption (on cite le chiffre de 60%) ont institué une procédure de destitution contre la présidente, sous prétexte de irrégularités comptables, des « pédalages fiscaux » pour combler les déficits dans les comptes publics - une pratique routinière de tous les gouvernement brésiliens antérieurs ! Certes, plusieurs cadres du Parti des Travailleurs sont impliqués dans le scandale de corruption de la Petrobras, la Compagnie Nationale de Pétrole, mais pas Dilma... En fait, les députés de droite qui ont méné la campagne contre la Présidente sont parmi les plus empêtrés dans cette affaire, à commencer par le président du Parlement, Eduardo Cunha (récemment suspendu), accusé de corruption, blanchiment, évasion fiscale au Panama, etc.

    • Brésil. Les derniers instants
      Par Henrique Carneiro | (Article publié sur le site Correio da Cidadania, le 29 août 2016 ; traduction A l’Encontre)

      (...) Cependant, en affirmant qu’elle n’a pas été complice du pire de la politique au Brésil, elle n’a pas dit la vérité. Ce sont ses propres anciens alliés qui vont maintenant voter pour mettre fin à son mandat, parmi lesquels se trouvent d’anciens ministres.

      Oui, elle s’allia avec le pire de la politique au Brésil, de Paulo Maluf [leader du Parti progressiste, héritier de l’ARENA, le parti du « pouvoir » durant la Junte militaire et impliqué dans diverses affaires de corruption] à Fernando Collor de Melo [président de 1990 à 1992 et destitué pour corruption en septembre 1992], en passant par les partis physiologiques [au Brésil, l’expression renvoie aux partis qui se structurent et vivent de l’argent public provenant de leurs charges] et les partis fondamentalistes évangéliques, et surtout avec le PMDB (Parti du mouvement démocratique brésilien), son partenaire de longue date.

      Pourquoi ne pouvait-elle pas faire une autocritique portant sur ces alliances ? Parce que ces alliances continuent !

      Même face à l’impeachment, le Parti des Travailleurs (PT) perpétue son alliance avec les partis comploteurs ! Dilma Rousseff ne s’est pas enrichie personnellement, ce qui la distingue réellement de la vénalité explicite de la plupart de ceux qui la condamnent.

      Mais elle n’a pas rompu ses alliances avec le pire de la politique brésilienne, avec les plus effrontés des corrompus, avec les oligarques les plus anciens, avec le système politique auquel elle s’est adaptée.

      La chose la plus triste est que le rôle majeur du PT consista à neutraliser la mobilisation populaire, et à réduire le mouvement social à la fonction d’une simple base électorale.(...)

  • Brésil : « 60 % de la population veut rapidement une nouvelle élection présidentielle »
    https://www.crashdebug.fr/international/12183-bresil-60-de-la-population-veut-rapidement-une-nouvelle-election-pr

    José Reinaldo Carvalho

    Responsable #International pour le Parti communiste du Brésil (PCdoB) (1), José Reinaldo Carvalho revient sur la situation politique avant l’ouverture des jeux Olympiques au Brésil.

    HD. Quelles actions ont prévues le Parti des travailleurs et la gauche avant la décision finale sur le sort de Dilma Rousseff qui doit intervenir fin août ?

    José Reinaldo Carvalho. Sur le plan politique, la gauche s’oppose toujours fermement au gouvernement usurpateur de Michel Temer et lutte pour la restauration du mandat de la présidente Dilma Rousseff, obtenu démocratiquement avec les votes de 54 millions de Brésiliens. Le dimanche 31 juillet, des manifestations ont eu lieu avec le slogan « Fora, Temer ! » (« Dégage, Temer !). Mais la gauche n’a pas fait preuve du niveau d’unité nécessaire, à (...)

    #En_vedette #Ça_s'est_dit_par_là...

  • Brésil : une nouvelle étape vers la destitution de Dilma Rousseff
    http://www.lemonde.fr/ameriques/article/2016/08/04/bresil-une-nouvelle-etape-vers-la-destitution-de-dilma-rousseff_4978291_3222

    Jeudi 4 août, une commission spéciale de vingt et un sénateurs s’est prononcée en faveur de la poursuite de la procédure de destitution contre la présidente Dilma Rousseff. La dirigeante de gauche, suspendue depuis le 12 mai, est accusée de maquillage des comptes publics.

    Ce n’est qu’une étape, non contraignante, avant le vote en assemblée plénière du Sénat, le 9 août. Ce jour-là, si la majorité simple des quatre-vingt-un sénateurs se prononce pour la poursuite de la procédure d’« impeachment_ », une nouvelle séance sera organisée à la fin d’août, au cours de laquelle l’avenir de Mme Rousseff sera décidé. Soit elle est destituée, et perd donc ses droits politiques pour huit ans, soit elle retrouve son mandat, qui va jusqu’à la fin de 2018. Selon des projections, au moins cinquante-quatre des quatre-vingt-un sénateurs voteront contre Dilma Rousseff pour la destituer après plus de cinq ans au pouvoir.

    • Selon des projections sujettes à caution issues de la Justice Brésilienne (organisation gauchiste et partisane), une majorité de sénateurs est concernée par l’enquête pour corruption Petrobras. Mais selon notre déontologie, il ne nous est pas possible de l’évoquer à moins de 3 pages de cet article et dans une note de bas de page, idéalement.

  • Au Brésil, les femmes continuent de se battre contre le « coup d’Etat sexiste » | Adeline Haverland
    http://information.tv5monde.com/terriennes/au-bresil-les-femmes-continuent-de-se-battre-contre-le-coup-d-

    Le Brésil accueille à partir de ce 5 août 2016, les 31 ème Jeux olympiques. Si le sport est au cœur de toutes les préoccupations, en marge de l’événement, la contestation politique continue d’animer la société civile. Avec à sa tête, des Brésiliennes, décidées à lutter pour le retour de l’ancienne présidente Dilma Rousseff et contre ceux qui ont pris sa place. Source : Terriennes

  • « Le système #Politique brésilien est en train de s’écrouler »
    http://www.bastamag.net/Jean-Tible-Le-systeme-politique-bresilien-est-en-train-de-s-ecrouler

    Le sort de la présidente brésilienne Dilma Rousseff devrait être définitivement scellé fin août. En attendant, c’est un gouvernement intérimaire de droite qui a pris le pouvoir au Brésil, sans aucune élection. Il n’a pas tardé à lancer un programme d’austérité, fragilisant les progrès sociaux obtenus depuis une décennie. Au même moment, les révélations de la vaste opération anti-corruption en cours dans le pays continuent, touchant plusieurs ministres du nouveau gouvernement. Bien loin de stabiliser un pays (...)

    #Décrypter

    / Indignés de tous les pays..., #Amériques, #Entretiens, #Oligarchies, Politique, A la (...)

    #Indignés_de_tous_les_pays...

  • Brésil : Eduardo Cunha, meneur de la destitution de Rousseff, démissionne de la présidence de l’Assemblée
    http://www.lemonde.fr/ameriques/article/2016/07/07/bresil-eduardo-cunha-meneur-de-la-destitution-de-rousseff-demissionne-de-la-

    Eduardo Cunha, fer de lance de la procédure de destitution de la présidente du Brésil Dilma Rousseff, a annoncé jeudi 7 juillet sa démission de la présidence de l’Assemblée nationale, acculé par des soupçons de corruption.
    […]
    Eduardo Cunha, 57 ans, est visé par de multiples accusations de corruption dans le cadre du scandale Petrobras, soupçonné notamment d’avoir alimenté un compte secret en Suisse avec des pots-de-vin de plusieurs millions de reais.

    M. Cunha, qui avait été élu président de l’Assemblée en février 2015, a tiré depuis décembre les ficelles de la procédure d’impeachment de la présidente Dilma Rousseff, dont il est le plus farouche adversaire.

  • Cet éditorial suggère qu’Israël doit profiter du coup au Brésil, au motif que le nouveau Président par intérim, Michel Temer, est un « ami d’Israël » : Israel missing opportunity to have ambassador at the Olympics
    http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4809123,00.html

    In August 2015, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that he was appointing the former head of the Yesha Council as Israel’s ambassador to Brazil. The host of the upcoming Olympics objected to the appointment on the basis of the nominee’s ties to West Bank settlements. Israel attempted to solve the problem via quiet talks, but in March 2016, the decision was cancelled, and Dayan was assigned as the consul general in New York, instead.

    After internal political scandals resulted in Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff’s suspension from power, the conditions were ripe to solve the crisis, but the Ministry of Foreign Affairs took the decision to delay naming an ambassador for the time being to avoid the impression that the Brazilians’ refusal to accept Dayan had been successful. This means that Israel wants to “punish” Brazil for its handling of the matter.

    Sources in the MFA expressed surprise at the delay, especially as Acting President Michel Temer is considered friendly to Israel. Temer attended former Israeli president Shimon Peres’s 90th birthday party, and Brazil’s new minister of foreign relations, José Serra, is considered very close to the Jewish community and even came in the 80s for a three-week visit to Israel.

  • Transcript Suggests a Plot Behind Effort to Oust Brazilian President
    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/24/world/americas/brazil-dilma-rousseff-impeachment-petrobras.html?smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur&

    Brazil’s interim president, Michel Temer, on Monday suffered a major setback in his campaign to win over the country when a report of recordings surfaced suggesting that one of his ministers had plotted to head off the huge Petrobras corruption investigation by pursuing the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff.

    The minister, Romero Jucá, an influential leader in the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, or PMDB, though denying accusations of wrongdoing, said he would step down on Tuesday and return to the Senate. Earlier in the day, the Brazilian newspaper Folha de S. Paulo published excerpts from a recorded conversation between Mr. Jucá and a former business executive that indicated they were seeking to impede the sprawling investigation in which both were caught up.

    […]

    According to Folha de S. Paulo, Mr. Jucá spoke to Sergio Machado, the former president of Transpetro, a subsidiary of Petrobras. Mr. Machado had left that position after being implicated in the Petrobras scandal.

    The recordings, from a conversation in March, suggest that Mr. Jucá entered into an agreement with the goal of impeding and even possibly stopping the investigation. There was also a suggestion that the impeachment might have been part of that plan.

    In one excerpt, Mr. Machado made reference to his desire for “the departure of Dilma.”

  • Brésil : un recul de 50 ans en 5 jours (Blog do Miro) — Jeferson Miola
    http://www.legrandsoir.info/bresil-un-recul-de-50-ans-en-5-jours-blog-do-miro.html

    le lecteur pourra être surpris par la virulence de cet article, en particulier sa deuxième partie, contre le gouvernement intérimaire de Michel Temer, issu d’un véritable coup d’État institutionnel. Il reflète pourtant assez bien la révolte des blogueurs brésiliens progressistes, d’abord naturellement envers le coup d’État, mais aussi envers les agissements de ce gouvernement intérimaire, c’est-à-dire provisoire, puisque la destitution de la Présidente Dilma Rousseff, écartée du pouvoir pour 180 jours, n’a pas encore été jugée par le Sénat. C’est dire le caractère anti-démocratique des putschistes (mais c’est un pléonasme). Tereza Cruvinel, journaliste et blogueuse brésilienne, fait la comparaison avec le gouvernement intérimaire d’Itamar Franco qui, après la destitution provisoire du Président Collor, en 1992, s’est occupé des affaires courantes du pays. Ce n’est qu’à la destitution définitive du Président Collor qu’il a constitué son gouvernement. Mais nous reviendrons sur la pertinence de cette comparaison lors de notre REVUE (TRÈS) CRADE en préparation (ou Revue de Presse des Blogs Sujos, ces saletés de blogs brésiliens d’information alternative, comme les nomment les putschistes et les médias dominants, le journal et la télévision brésiliens Globo en tête).

  • Destitution de la présidente brésilienne Dilma Rousseff : entretien en français avec Pepe Escobar - Cercle des Volontaires - Interview, Vidéo par Raphaël « JahRaph » Berland / le 12 mai 2016
    http://www.cercledesvolontaires.fr/2016/05/12/destitution-dilma-rousseff-pepe-escobar

    La présidente brésilienne Dilma Rousseff vient d’être officiellement écartée du pouvoir présidentiel au Brésil. L’annonce fait suite au vote mercredi des sénateurs en faveur de l’ouverture du procès en destitution de la dirigeante, qui est automatiquement remplacée pour une période de 180 jours maximum par celui qui était alors vice-président de la République, Michel Temer. Ce que beaucoup dénoncent comme un « coup d’état institutionnel » met fin à 13 ans de pouvoir de la gauche au Brésil. Vendredi dernier, le Cercle des Volontaires recevait le journaliste et analyste géopolitique brésilien Pepe Escobar afin qu’il nous livre son analyse sur des événements pas forcément faciles à appréhender vus de France.

    Mathieu P. et Alexandre Karal

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P63XFVSgMFo

  • De Dilma-suspendue aux JO-boitillant
    http://www.dedefensa.org/article/de-dilma-suspendue-aux-jo-boitillant

    De Dilma-suspendue aux JO-boitillant

    La présidente du Brésil Dilma Rousseff a été suspendue de ses fonctions pour au moins six mois, le temps que doit durer son “procès” en destitution après les votes successifs des différents corps législatifs dans ce sens. Dans l’intervalle, c’est le vice-président Temer qui assurera les fonctions de président. On se trouve dans une situation extrêmement complexe, où les explications souvent contraires abondent, où domine par-dessus tout la dramatique situation économique et sociale du Brésil, qui va traverser une période surréaliste où vont se mélanger la perspective de troubles très graves en même temps que l’événement, d’une considérable importance économique et de communication aujourd’hui dans le cadre général de la globalisation, que sont les Jeux Olympiques.

    Exemple (...)

  • To See the Real Story in Brazil, Look at Who Is Being Installed as President - and Finance Chiefs
    http://www.filmsforaction.org/articles/to-see-the-real-story-in-brazil-look-at-who-is-being-installed-as-pr

    It’s not easy for outsiders to sort through all the competing claims about Brazil’s political crisis and the ongoing effort to oust its president, Dilma Rousseff, who won re-election a mere 18...