The Brazilian judge defying Trump is testing peers' patienceNew Foto - The Brazilian judge defying Trump is testing peers' patience

By Ricardo Brito, Luciana Magalhaes and Manuela Andreoni BRASILIA (Reuters) -Brazil's Supreme Court goes into final deliberations in its trial of former President Jair Bolsonaro this week in a case that has incurred the wrath of U.S. President Donald Trump. No man has felt the force of that fury, or dismissed it as scornfully, as Alexandre de Moraes, the judge who put Bolsonaro under house arrest, jailed hundreds of his backers for invading government buildings and cowed Elon Musk over social media content. His pursuit of Bolsonaro has led Trump to impose a 50% trade tariff on Brazil, visa restrictions and individual financial sanctions. Moraes, 56, whose stern bald visage has come to define the court he joined eight years ago, insists he won't back down. But behind his implacable facade, he faces a growing backlash from lawmakers seeking his impeachment and public opinion tiring of his hardline tactics. Even within the high court, which has upheld his decisions and presented a largely united front, tensions are rising. Two court sources said his fellow justices worry the Bolsonaro case may draw even stronger blowback from Trump, who has demanded that Brazil drop the trial that the U.S. president calls a "witch hunt." Some Supreme Court justices are preparing to publicly question elements of decisions by Moraes, who is running the case, to show their independence, the court sources said. Moraes told Reuters in an interview in August that he had not heard any concerns from peers about how he has run the Bolsonaro case. "If anyone did complain, they complained to the press," he said. "Whoever put this in the press, I'll say here that it's a lie." In July, the U.S. government stripped visas from eight high court justices, sparing three judges who had clearly diverged with Moraes in prior cases. That has fed speculation among the local press that the Trump administration is trying to sow division on the court. In response to questions from Reuters, a senior U.S. State Department official did not address that speculation but said the visa restrictions targeted Moraes. President Trump "has taken decisive action through the imposition of Global Magnitsky Sanctions against Justice Moraes and his allies," the official said, referring to a law that allows the U.S. to impose economic penalties against foreigners it considers to have a record of corruption or human rights abuses. Supreme Court Justice Andre Mendonca, whom Bolsonaro appointed in 2021, has hinted increasingly in public about divergences on the court. "A good judge must be respected, not feared," he said in a recent speech, which some in the court took as thinly veiled criticism of Moraes, who would address the same event in Rio de Janeiro later in the day. "Their rulings should bring social peace, not chaos, uncertainty, or insecurity." Mendonca did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. Bolsonaro is still widely expected to be convicted of plotting a coup to overturn the 2022 election, which he lost to President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and sentenced to prison by the five-judge panel convened from Tuesday through next week. Bolsonaro has denied any wrongdoing and called Moraes a "dictator." FRAGILE DEMOCRACY Alexandre de Moraes was born on December 13th, 1968, at one of the darkest moments of Brazil's recent history. That was the day the military dictatorship then ruling the country gave itself the power to close Congress and suspend political rights, unleashing an era of repression that included the torture of thousands and killing of hundreds of Brazilians. Moraes and his supporters say his aggressive approach to Bolsonaro and his allies has always been aimed at defending Brazilian democracy and avoiding a repeat of that dark day. His critics argue the opposite, accusing him of censorship and illegal overreach in orders to remove social media posts from Bolsonaro supporters, seize the phones of businessmen discussing the virtues of a coup and jail a lawmaker who made threats against the court. The senior State Department official said, "Brazil's dark reality is a stark reminder of where political weaponization of a government, such as the one conducted under the Biden administration, ultimately leads." Trump has accused Democratic former President Joe Biden of "weaponizing" the U.S. legal system and has accused him and former President Barack Obama, without providing evidence, of an effort to falsely tie him to Russia and undermine Trump's 2016 presidential campaign. Still, if the Supreme Court convicts Bolsonaro, a former army captain, and generals who allegedly plotted with him, it would be the first time in Brazil's coup-spotted history that military officers are punished for threatening democracy. "The history of Brazil and the world teaches that impunity, omissions and cowardice can, at first, look like the fastest way to solve problems," Moraes told the audience in Rio. "Impunity never worked in history for any country in the world." Many Brazilians are ready to see Bolsonaro punished. In an August survey by pollster Quaest, 55% of respondents said his house arrest was justified. Brazil's conservative business elite has also cheered the idea of Sao Paulo Governor Tarcisio Freitas, who served in Bolsonaro's cabinet, running for president next year as a more moderate standard-bearer of his right-wing coalition. However, those hopes have not translated into widespread approval for Moraes, whose scorched-earth jurisprudence is wearing thin with many Brazilians. Quaest found in August that 46% of Brazilians want him impeached. Bolsonaro's allies say they have lined up more than 41 senators eager to remove Moraes from office, still shy of the 54 needed for impeachment. Senate President Davi Alcolumbre has refused to allow a vote on the matter, which is likely to become a battle cry among right-wing parties looking to add Senate seats in the 2026 general election. STEEL IN ADVERSITY Moraes was starting a vacation in Paris in January 2023 when hundreds of Bolsonaro's supporters rioted in Brasilia, rampaging through government buildings in an attempt to trigger a military intervention that could reverse the electoral results. The judge's longtime friend Floriano Azevedo, a member of Brazil's electoral court, recalls his astonishment when Moraes told him he was getting on the next plane back to Brazil. "There is a rebellion of those proportions, of which he was a target, and he decided to go back to the epicenter of the thing," he said. Azevedo said adversity only steels Moraes. "Sometimes people assume others will behave the way they do," Moraes told Reuters in the August interview from his office in Brasilia. "So maybe they would back down like cowards if they were threatened. Obviously, the Supreme Court would never cower in the face of threats." His resolve has earned him a measure of deference in recent years, when many on the high court worried the institution was under threat. But that tough resolve may now be backfiring. "He is polite and kind," said former Justice Marco Aurelio Mello, who served on the court with Moraes for four years. "But I wouldn't want to be tried by him." (Reporting by Ricardo Brito in Brasilia and Luciana Magalhaes and Manuela Andreoni Sao PauloEditing by Brad Haynes and Rosalba O'Brien)

The Brazilian judge defying Trump is testing peers' patience

The Brazilian judge defying Trump is testing peers' patience By Ricardo Brito, Luciana Magalhaes and Manuela Andreoni BRASILIA (Reuters)...
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left for military parade in China, Yonhap reportsNew Foto - North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left for military parade in China, Yonhap reports

SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korean leader Kim Jong Un left Pyongyang by train on Monday afternoon to attend a military parade in China, South Korea's Yonhap News Agency said. This marks a rare trip out of the isolated state for his first attendance at a major multilateral diplomatic event. Kim is expected to arrive in Beijing on Tuesday, Yonhap said. At the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping, the North Korean leader is due to attend the military parade in Beijing on Wednesday to celebrate the formal surrender of Japan in World War Two, state media said. Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has cultivate a close relationship with Kim, will also be at the parade. (Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin and Joyce Lee; Editing by Alex Richardson)

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left for military parade in China, Yonhap reports

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has left for military parade in China, Yonhap reports SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korean leader Kim Jong Un left ...
Aid flotilla heading to Gaza returns to Barcelona due to stormy weatherNew Foto - Aid flotilla heading to Gaza returns to Barcelona due to stormy weather

MADRID (Reuters) -An aid flotilla of dozens of boats that had set sail for Gaza on Sunday carrying aid and pro-Palestinian activists, including climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, has returned to port in Barcelona due to stormy weather, organisers said on Monday. "We conducted a sea trial and then returned to port to allow the storm to pass. This meant delaying our departure to avoid risking complications with the smaller boats," the Global Sumud Flotilla Mission said in a statement, adding winds had been up to around 35 mph (56 kph). The organizers did not say when they planned to resume the journey. Activists including Game of Thrones actor Liam Cunningham are on the flotilla of several dozen boats that is aiming to break Israel's naval blockade and deliver food and humanitarian supplies to the enclave, which has been devastated by nearly two years of war. Israel has argued that the naval blockade it imposed in 2007 is necessary to stop weapons being smuggled to the Hamas Palestinian militant group. It has described other attempts to break it - including one that included Thunberg in June - as a propaganda stunt in support of Hamas. (Reporting by Charlie DevereuxEditing by Andrei Khalip and Frances Kerry)

Aid flotilla heading to Gaza returns to Barcelona due to stormy weather

Aid flotilla heading to Gaza returns to Barcelona due to stormy weather MADRID (Reuters) -An aid flotilla of dozens of boats that had set sa...
Ukraine suspects Russia involved in killing of former parliamentary speaker, says police chiefNew Foto - Ukraine suspects Russia involved in killing of former parliamentary speaker, says police chief

KYIV (Reuters) -Ukraine suspects Russian involvement in the murder of former parliamentary speaker Andriy Parubiy, the head of the Ukrainian police said on Monday. Parubiy was shot dead in the western city of Lviv on Saturday and President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said earlier on Monday that a suspect had been arrested for what he called "a horrific murder" that impacted "security in a country at war". "We know that this crime was not accidental. There is Russian involvement. Everyone will be held accountable before the law," police chief Ivan Vyhivskyi said on Facebook. Russia has not commented on the killing or on the suggestion that it was involved in the incident. Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said on the Telegram messaging app that the suspected shooter had been detained overnight in the Khmelnytskyi region in western Ukraine. "Many details cannot be shared at this time," Klymenko said. "I will only say that the crime was carefully planned: the victim's movements were studied, a route was mapped out, and an escape plan was thought through." Police chief Vyhivskyi said the suspect had disguised himself as a courier and had opened fire on Parubiy in broad daylight, firing his weapon eight times. The shooter even made sure that the victim was dead, Vyhivskyi added. "He spent a long time preparing, watching, planning, and finally pulling the trigger. It took us only 36 hours to track him down and arrest him," Vyhivskyi added. Police published two photographs from the scene of the arrest that show two special forces officers holding a handcuffed man by the arms. Naked to the waist, he has his back to the camera and his face is not visible. Parubiy, 54, was a member of Ukraine's parliament and had served as parliamentary speaker from April 2016 to August 2019. He was one of the leaders of protests in 2013-14 demanding closer ties with the European Union that led to the ousting of Ukraine's then pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovich. Parubiy was also secretary of Ukraine's National Security and Defence Council from February to August 2014, a period when Russia annexed the Crimea peninsula and Moscow-backed separatists began fighting government forces in eastern Ukraine. (Reporting by Pavel PolityukEditing by Alex Richardson and Gareth Jones)

Ukraine suspects Russia involved in killing of former parliamentary speaker, says police chief

Ukraine suspects Russia involved in killing of former parliamentary speaker, says police chief KYIV (Reuters) -Ukraine suspects Russian invo...
Modi and Putin meet on summit sidelines as India faces steep US tariff over Russian oil importsNew Foto - Modi and Putin meet on summit sidelines as India faces steep US tariff over Russian oil imports

TIANJIN, China (AP) — Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin met on the sidelines of a regional summit in China on Monday in a show of deepening ties whenNew Delhi's relations with Washington are strainedover the purchase of Russian oil. The two leaders held talks after attending the key session of theShanghai Cooperation Organizationgathering in the port city of Tianjin, where discussions focused on regional stability and bilateral cooperation. In his remarks to open the talks, Modi termed the partnership with Moscow as "special and privileged." Putin addressed Modi as a "dear friend" and hailed Russia's ties with India as special, friendly and trusting. "Russia and India have maintained special relations for decades. Friendly, trusting. This is the foundation for the development of our relations in the future," Putin said. "These relations are absolutely non-partisan in nature, supported by the overwhelming majority of the peoples of our countries." Modi usedthe meetingto welcome the peace initiatives aimed at halting the conflict between Russia and Ukraine and called on the stakeholders to move forward constructively. "To end the conflict soonest and establish peace permanently, we need to find out a way. It's a call of the entire humanity," Modi said. At the talks, Putin was accompanied by a large delegation that included top government officials. Russian state media reported that before sitting down for the formal dialouge, Putin and Modi spoke one-on-one for almost an hour in Aurus, a high-end, Russian-made limousine that Putin regularly brings on foreign trips. The meeting carried added significance as it came days after U.S.President Donald Trumpimposed an additional 25% tariffs on Indian imports, raising the total duties to a steep 50%, in retaliation to India's continued purchases of discounted Russian oil. Washington has repeatedly warned New Delhi against buying Russian crude which it said was partly keeping Moscow's revenues afloat to fund the Ukraine war. India has defended its imports as essential for meeting its growing energy needs of 1.4 billion people. Modi travelled to Russia twice last year. The first was a visit to Moscow for talks with Putin in July, which was his first trip to Russia since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by the Kremlin's forces in February 2022. He then traveled to Kazan in October forthe summit of the BRICS blocof developing economies. Russia has hadstrong ties with India since the Cold War, and New Delhi's importance as a key trading partner has grown since the war between Moscow and Ukraine. China and India have become key buyers of Russian oil after the West shunned Russian exports to punish Moscow. India historically bought most of its crude from the Middle East, but the world's third-largest crude importer after China and the U.S. has started buying Russian oil available at discounted rates. Russia now accounts for around 37% of India's total oil imports, according to analysts and Indian officials. Trade between India and Russia has sharply increased in recent years, touching a record $68.7 billion in the 2024-25 financial year during strong energy cooperation. Imports from Russia reached around $64 billion and exports from India totaled about $5 billion, as per Indian government data. India's financial year runs from April to March. The two nations aspire to bolster the trade to $100 billion by 2030. ___ Roy reported from New Delhi.

Modi and Putin meet on summit sidelines as India faces steep US tariff over Russian oil imports

Modi and Putin meet on summit sidelines as India faces steep US tariff over Russian oil imports TIANJIN, China (AP) — Indian Prime Minister ...

 

VS POLITICS © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com