Bolsonaro supporters clash with police before
major rally in Brasília
Violence erupts as rightwing activists attempt to
break through blockade and force their way to congress
Tom
Phillips in Brasília
Tue 7 Sep 2021
09.56 BST
Pre-dawn
skirmishes have erupted between police and supporters of Brazil’s president,
Jair Bolsonaro, as rightwing activists tried to force their way towards
congress before major pro-government rallies that have put Latin America’s
biggest democracy on edge.
Footage
published by the Brasilia-based news website Metrópoles showed military police
using pepper spray to repel a crowd of cheering Bolsonaristas in the early
hours of Tuesday.
Officers
can be seen wrestling with one demonstrator as the group attempted to break
through a police blockade on the avenue leading to congress using lorries
draped with Brazil’s yellow and green flag.
Other
footage shows a police officer drawing his gun in an attempt to deter the mob
and Bolsonaro supporters vowing to storm the supreme court. In one video a
Bolsonaro supporter can be heard berating the police for blocking the
protesters’ path. “God will make you pay for this. You communists!” she shouts.
Tuesday’s
Independence Day protests – called by Brazil’s embattled leader in an apparent
attempt to project strength at the worst moment of his presidency since it
began in January 2019 – have sent shockwaves through Brazilian society.
Many
citizens fear violence as hardline Bolsonaro supporters take to the streets to
champion a leader whose ratings have plunged as a result of corruption scandals
involving his allies and relatives and his handling of a Covid outbreak that
has killed more than 580,000 people.
Others
worry that with support of the military Bolsonaro could be poised to attempt a
self-coup, by which he would grab dictatorial powers by closing Brazil’s
democratic institutions.
Bolsonaro’s
supporters were publicly calling for him to do just that on Monday as they
gathered in the capital, Brasília, where the president was expected to address
supporters.
On the
esplanade of ministries – the heart of Brazilian politics – one demonstrator
had parked a truck decorated with a photograph of Bolsonaro making gun signs
with his hands and a banner that read: “Bolsonaro call in the armed forces”.
Further
down the road, near the foreign ministry, another of the far-right president’s
devotees carried a flag calling for the dissolution of the supreme court and
congress.
On
Saturday, Bolsonaro, who is notorious for his admiration of authoritarian
leaders and Brazil’s 1964-85 dictatorship, warned a political “rupture” was on
the cards.
“It’s going
to be glorious for our nation. Glorious!” said Evilasio Inácio da Silva, a
Bolsonaro-supporting carpenter who had driven for two-and-a-half days by
motorbike to reach the demo from his home 1,200 miles away in the north-east.
“My arm’s a
bit dead … But it’s worth it. Because we’re fighting for our freedom,” said
Silva, who was wearing a T-shirt depicting Bolsonaro as the Bruce Willis
character John McClane from the film Die Hard.
On the eve
of the rallies, there was trepidation at an encampment of about 1,000
indigenous protesters two miles from where the pro-Bolsonaro demos are being
held.
“I don’t
know if it’s fear, but we feel insecure … that someone might come along at
night and do something silly,” said Cristian Arapiun, an indigenous activist from
the Amazon state of Pará.
“These
people are crazy and we have no idea what they might do to us,” said Arapiun,
whose group had placed a banner near their cluster of tents reading:
“Bolsonaro, begone!”
“The
atmosphere is really heavy,” said Braulina Baniwa, an indigenous leader from
Brazil’s border region with Colombia and Venezuela who said activists were
being urged not to leave the camp.
As well as
Tuesday morning’s rally in Brasília, a second mass gathering is being held in
Brazil’s economic capital, São Paulo, on Tuesday afternoon. Smaller
demonstrations are being held in other towns and cities, while some opposition
groups are also planning to march, fuelling fears of clashes between the two
sides.
Ruth de
Aquino, a columnist for the newspaper O Globo, said she feared Bolsonaro was
purposefully trying to spark violence in order to distract from his woeful
presidency.
“Many
presidents resort to overseas conflicts to boost their popularity. In the
absence of external enemies, Bolsonaro is inciting an internal war so Brazil
forgets his utter incompetence,” she said.
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