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Brazil impeachment committee recommends removing Rousseff

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A Brazilian Senate committee voted Thursday to recommend the full upper house remove suspended president Dilma Rousseff from office in an impeachment trial, sending the nation's political drama into its end game.

The decision -- passed by a vote of 14 to five -- is non-binding, but delivers Rousseff yet another setback on the eve of the Olympics opening ceremony in Rio de Janeiro.

Instead of presiding over the opening of an Olympics once meant to showcase Brazil's growing economic power and political stability, Rousseff now takes another step toward what looks increasingly like her political downfall.

Rousseff is accused of spending money without congressional approval and taking out unauthorized loans from state banks to make the national budget look better than it really was as she campaigned for re-election in 2014.

She says such maneuvers were common practice under previous administrations, and calls the impeachment procedure a coup in disguise.

Her allies point out that many of the lawmakers accusing her are implicated in corruption cases far more serious than mere accounting shenanigans.

But opponents on the impeachment committee delivered a damning verdict.

"The president will be removed from office for the extremely serious crimes she committed," said Senator Cassio Lima of the opposition PSDB party.

Picture taken during a session of the Senate's Impeachment Special Committee regarding Brazilia...
Picture taken during a session of the Senate's Impeachment Special Committee regarding Brazilian suspended President Dilma Rousseff, at the Congress in Brasilia on August 3, 2016
Evaristo Sa, AFP/File

"It was the biggest fiscal fraud in the country's history."

Rousseff is refusing to attend Friday's Olympic ceremony, saying she does not want to play a "secondary role."

Her bitter political enemy Michel Temer, who is serving as interim president, will oversee the opening ceremony. If she is removed from office, he will become the full-fledged president until elections in 2018.

On August 9, the full Senate will vote on whether to proceed with the impeachment trial. A simple majority would suffice and the measure is expected to pass easily.

Then a final and decisive session in the full Senate is scheduled for August 29, a week after the Olympics close, when a two-thirds majority is required to eject Rousseff.

- Olympic gloom -

Impeachment committee official Antonio Anastasia said Tuesday that he fully supports finding Rousseff guilty.

"I vote for the accusation to go ahead," he said in a report to the rest of the committee, calling the case against Rousseff "undeniable."

Activists protest against suspended president Dilma Rousseff in Sao Paulo  Brazil on July 31  2016
Activists protest against suspended president Dilma Rousseff in Sao Paulo, Brazil on July 31, 2016
Miguel Schincariol, AFP/File

Since taking over as interim president when Rousseff was suspended to face trial in May, Temer has taken the government sharply rightward.

With Brazil in its worst recession in decades and crippled by corruption, Temer says the country needs to leave behind 13 years of leftist rule by Rousseff's Workers' Party.

The political mess makes a sad backdrop to the Olympics that were awarded to Rio in 2009 when Rousseff's predecessor and political mentor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was hugely popular.

Now, not only is Rousseff facing oblivion, but Lula is set to go on trial for obstruction of justice charges. He also faces corruption allegations that could sink his hopes of returning to power in the 2018 elections.

Rousseff, Brazil's first woman president, is a former leftist guerrilla who was jailed and tortured by the country's military regime in the 1970s.

She rode Lula's coattails to power when term limits forced him to step down in 2011.

But the buoyant national mood soon deflated as Brazil's booming economy sank into a deep recession and an explosive corruption scandal erupted at state oil giant Petrobras.

Rousseff is not facing corruption charges in the wide-ranging Petrobras scandal. But she has been tainted by its stain on the Workers' Party, which is accused of lining its coffers with some of the missing billions.

"She's paying the bill of the PT's mistakes," conservative Senator Ana Amelia told AFP in the build-up to the vote.

A Brazilian Senate committee voted Thursday to recommend the full upper house remove suspended president Dilma Rousseff from office in an impeachment trial, sending the nation’s political drama into its end game.

The decision — passed by a vote of 14 to five — is non-binding, but delivers Rousseff yet another setback on the eve of the Olympics opening ceremony in Rio de Janeiro.

Instead of presiding over the opening of an Olympics once meant to showcase Brazil’s growing economic power and political stability, Rousseff now takes another step toward what looks increasingly like her political downfall.

Rousseff is accused of spending money without congressional approval and taking out unauthorized loans from state banks to make the national budget look better than it really was as she campaigned for re-election in 2014.

She says such maneuvers were common practice under previous administrations, and calls the impeachment procedure a coup in disguise.

Her allies point out that many of the lawmakers accusing her are implicated in corruption cases far more serious than mere accounting shenanigans.

But opponents on the impeachment committee delivered a damning verdict.

“The president will be removed from office for the extremely serious crimes she committed,” said Senator Cassio Lima of the opposition PSDB party.

Picture taken during a session of the Senate's Impeachment Special Committee regarding Brazilia...

Picture taken during a session of the Senate's Impeachment Special Committee regarding Brazilian suspended President Dilma Rousseff, at the Congress in Brasilia on August 3, 2016
Evaristo Sa, AFP/File

“It was the biggest fiscal fraud in the country’s history.”

Rousseff is refusing to attend Friday’s Olympic ceremony, saying she does not want to play a “secondary role.”

Her bitter political enemy Michel Temer, who is serving as interim president, will oversee the opening ceremony. If she is removed from office, he will become the full-fledged president until elections in 2018.

On August 9, the full Senate will vote on whether to proceed with the impeachment trial. A simple majority would suffice and the measure is expected to pass easily.

Then a final and decisive session in the full Senate is scheduled for August 29, a week after the Olympics close, when a two-thirds majority is required to eject Rousseff.

– Olympic gloom –

Impeachment committee official Antonio Anastasia said Tuesday that he fully supports finding Rousseff guilty.

“I vote for the accusation to go ahead,” he said in a report to the rest of the committee, calling the case against Rousseff “undeniable.”

Activists protest against suspended president Dilma Rousseff in Sao Paulo  Brazil on July 31  2016

Activists protest against suspended president Dilma Rousseff in Sao Paulo, Brazil on July 31, 2016
Miguel Schincariol, AFP/File

Since taking over as interim president when Rousseff was suspended to face trial in May, Temer has taken the government sharply rightward.

With Brazil in its worst recession in decades and crippled by corruption, Temer says the country needs to leave behind 13 years of leftist rule by Rousseff’s Workers’ Party.

The political mess makes a sad backdrop to the Olympics that were awarded to Rio in 2009 when Rousseff’s predecessor and political mentor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was hugely popular.

Now, not only is Rousseff facing oblivion, but Lula is set to go on trial for obstruction of justice charges. He also faces corruption allegations that could sink his hopes of returning to power in the 2018 elections.

Rousseff, Brazil’s first woman president, is a former leftist guerrilla who was jailed and tortured by the country’s military regime in the 1970s.

She rode Lula’s coattails to power when term limits forced him to step down in 2011.

But the buoyant national mood soon deflated as Brazil’s booming economy sank into a deep recession and an explosive corruption scandal erupted at state oil giant Petrobras.

Rousseff is not facing corruption charges in the wide-ranging Petrobras scandal. But she has been tainted by its stain on the Workers’ Party, which is accused of lining its coffers with some of the missing billions.

“She’s paying the bill of the PT’s mistakes,” conservative Senator Ana Amelia told AFP in the build-up to the vote.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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