Source: Independent Media Institute
Just before 5 p.m. on Friday the 8th of November, Brazilās formerĀ presidentĀ Luiz InĆ”cio Lula da Silva walked out of his prison in Curitiba,Ā Brazil. LulaĀ went to prison in April last year on a 12-year sentence. Five-hundred andĀ eighty days of prison are now over, as the Federal SupremeĀ Court ruled thatĀ inmates who have not yet exhausted their appeals shouldĀ not be held inĀ prison.
In addition to Lula, about 5,000 Braziliansāmostly poor and blackācanĀ beĀ released based on the Supreme Courtās decision. Many of them haveĀ not beenĀ previously afforded the presumption of innocence, and largeĀ numbers of themĀ have been in prison without proper legal defense.
In addition to Lula, about 5,000 Braziliansāmostly poor and blackācanĀ beĀ released based on the Supreme Courtās decision. Many of them haveĀ not beenĀ previously afforded the presumption of innocence, and largeĀ numbers of themĀ have been in prison without proper legal defense.
The Supreme Court verdict was not directed at Lula, but at theĀ undemocraticĀ nature of the judicial system that had held people in prisonĀ before they hadĀ exhausted their appeals. Lulaās situation mirrored that ofĀ these thousands ofĀ other prisoners. It was as part of a judicial criticism ofĀ the unjust systemĀ that Lula was able to be free.
But as Lula walked out of his cell and into the Free Lula encampmentĀ acrossĀ the road from the prison, he signaled the importance of the FreeĀ Lula (LulaĀ Livre) campaign of international solidarity that went fromĀ Curitiba acrossĀ Latin America, and indeed across the world. From theĀ Free Lula encampmentĀ across from his prison, comrades would holdĀ vigils and wish him thrice a dayĀ greetings of āgood morning,ā āgoodĀ afternoon,ā and āgood evening.ā OnĀ November 8, Lula was able to beĀ greeted not by shouts of solidarity, but inĀ person.
The solidarity campaign drew in jurists and intellectuals, politicians andĀ celebrities, a range of people who felt that the imprisonment of Lula wasĀ unjust. What had become very clear was that the legal mechanisms hadĀ become aĀ political instrument of the elite to attack the left politicians andĀ leftĀ movements. The collaboration between the government prosecutorĀ and JudgeĀ SĆ©rgio Moro indicates that there was a weaponization of theĀ lawāwhat is knownĀ as lawfareāto prevent the Workersā Party fromĀ winning elections, and to makeĀ sure that the Brazilian elites hold power.Ā What āFree Lulaā meant was notĀ only the freedom of Lula, but also anĀ end to lawfare as an instrument againstĀ the people.
Lula walked out of his cell, but the case against himāa case with littleĀ evidenceāremains. Popular pressure will continue to completely annulĀ thisĀ persecution of Lula. There is little doubt the Free Lula campaign willĀ continue to mobilize support so that the courts declare that Lula isĀ innocentĀ and allow him his full political rights. The Operation Lava JatoĀ (Operation Car Wash) was not just used to putĀ Lula in prison, but to makeĀ sure that heāwho is supremely popular inĀ Brazilācannot run for officeĀ again.
Lulaās popularity comes both from the positive aspects of his presidencyĀ (when his government abolished poverty and expanded educationalĀ opportunities) and from his leadership against the neoliberal andĀ neofascistĀ governments of Michel Temer and Jair Bolsonaro. Out ofĀ prison, Lulaās voiceĀ will once more sharply turn on the hideous politics ofĀ Bolsonaro.
Lula is expected to make a statement to the nation from the office of aĀ tradeĀ union in SĆ£o Paulo. This is where he belongs, inside a workersāĀ office, amongĀ the people. Lula emerged as a central figure of the BrazilianĀ people duringĀ the historic strikes of 1978 and 1979, which played a keyĀ role in ending theĀ military dictatorship in Brazil. It is from the workersāĀ land that he willĀ make his stand. Over the course of the Free Lula struggle,Ā it became clearĀ that Lula was bigger than his political partyāthe WorkersāĀ Party (PT)āandĀ even bigger than Brazilās left. He represents the BrazilianĀ peopleāthe peopleĀ who are now struggling to maintain their homes in theĀ favelasĀ and in the encampments and in theĀ settlements, struggling to holdĀ onto the Amazon, struggling to study andĀ heal, eat, and smile.
It must be chilling for Bolsonaro to watch the television and see Lula walk confidently out of his prison and into the political domain
It must be chilling for Bolsonaro to watch the television and see Lula walk confidently out of his prison and into the political domain. Elections have brought the left back to power in Argentina, with the left retaining power in Bolivia. Even in Colombia, the left has made significant gains. Mass protests in Chile and Ecuador suggest the tide has turned in those two countries. Bolsonaro must know that the turn to the left in Brazil is imminent. The left now has its champion out on the streets.
This article was produced byĀ Globetrotter, a project of the IndependentĀ Media Institute.
Ana Paula VargasĀ works at theĀ Tricontinental: Institute for SocialĀ Research.
Vijay PrashadĀ is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. HeĀ is a writingĀ fellow and chief correspondent atĀ Globetrotter, a project of theĀ IndependentĀ Media Institute. He is the chief editor ofĀ LeftWord BooksĀ andĀ the director ofĀ Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research. He has writtenĀ more thanĀ twenty books, includingĀ The Darker Nations: A PeopleāsĀ History of the Third WorldĀ (TheĀ New Press, 2007),Ā The Poorer Nations: AĀ Possible History of the Global SouthĀ (Verso,Ā 2013),Ā The Death of theĀ Nation and the Future of the ArabĀ RevolutionĀ (University of CaliforniaĀ Press, 2016) andĀ Red Star Over the Third WorldĀ (LeftWord,Ā 2017). HeĀ writes regularly for Frontline, the Hindu, Newsclick, AlterNet andĀ BirGün.
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