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DEMOCRACY
High stakes for climate-change race in Brazil vote
By Joshua Howat Berger
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) Sept 29, 2022

Brazil: big, diverse and divided
Brazil, where far-right President Jair Bolsonaro faces leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in a first election round Sunday, is South America's biggest economy, but is plagued by gaping inequalities and violence.

Here are some key facts about the country:

- Half of South America -

Brazil is South America's largest country, occupying nearly half the continent with a surface area of 8.5 million square kilometers (3.3 million square miles).

It shares borders with all South American countries except Chile and Ecuador.

It is the continent's only Portuguese-speaking nation and the world's biggest Catholic country.

Brazil contains about 60 percent of the Amazon, the world's largest rainforest and a cradle of biodiversity.

But the Amazon is in growing peril due to massive deforestation on Bolsonaro's watch, with thousands of fires consuming 3,750 square kilometers of forest in the first half of 2022 alone.

- Monarchy, dictatorship, democracy -

Brazil gained independence from Portugal in 1822 and became a monarchy.

It abolished slavery in 1888, the last country in the Americas to do so.

A republic was established in 1889, followed by a military dictatorship from 1964 to 1985, after which civilian rule was restored.

The towering political figure of the country's modern history is Lula, who in 2003 became Brazil's first president elected from the left-wing Workers' Party (PT).

He was reelected in 2006, and left office in 2010 with an unprecedented 87 percent approval rating.

His social programs have helped lift millions of Brazilians out of poverty but his successor, Dilma Rousseff, was removed from power in 2016 after being impeached for alleged financial wrongdoing.

In 2019, Jair Bolsonaro became Brazil's first far-right president despite accusations of racism, sexism and homophobia.

He won with the support of the powerful "beef, bullets and Bibles" caucus -- the farm lobby, gun hardliners and Evangelical Christians.

There have been more than 150 bids for Bolsonaro's impeachment, and Brazil's 685,000 Covid-19 deaths have prompted several criminal investigations, including for "crimes against humanity."

Lula was jailed for 18 months before having a corruption conviction, which kept him out of the 2018 race against Bolsonaro, overturned last year.

- Coffee and cotton -

Brazil is among the world's leading exporters of coffee, sugar, orange juice, beef, poultry, ethanol, soybeans, iron, cotton and maize.

In 2021, its economy grew by 4.6 percent after contracting 3.9 percent in 2020 due to the pandemic.

But it battles high inflation and unemployment.

- Deep inequality -

With 47,503 murders in 2021, Brazil is one of the world's most violent countries, accounting for a fifth of global homicides. In 2021, a rape occurred every 10 minutes, according to the Brazilian Forum on Public Safety.

Glaring inequalities were worsened by the Covid-19 pandemic. The country has several thousand impoverished "favelas" or shantytowns.

The number of people living under the international poverty threshold of $5.50 a day leaped from 24 percent to 30 percent between 2014 and 2022, according to the Getulio Vargas Foundation.

Hunger affects 33.1 million of the country's 214 million inhabitants, according to the Brazilian Research Network on Food Sovereignty and Security.

- Five-time World Cup winners -

Brazil is the only country to have won football's World Cup five times (1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002), producing legends such as Pele and Neymar.

It is also renowned for its abundance of musical styles, from samba to Brazilian funk and bossa nova, reflecting the country's ethnic and cultural diversity.

The annual Rio carnival of dancers and outsized floats is the biggest in the world, drawing millions of people.

The image would indelibly mark President Jair Bolsonaro's term: the sky over Sao Paulo turning dark at 3:00 pm as smoke from fires in the Amazon rainforest engulfed Brazil's biggest city.

The black haze that traveled thousands of kilometers to the economic capital that day -- August 19, 2019, just under nine months into Bolsonaro's term -- drew global attention to the accelerating destruction of the Amazon under the far-right president, whose environmental record is under new scrutiny as Brazil holds elections Sunday.

Climate scientists and environmentalists say the stakes for the planet are potentially huge in the divisive race, which pits Bolsonaro against leftist ex-president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (2003-2010).

Three years after the fires that sparked worldwide outcry, Bolsonaro's record on protecting the Amazon and its Indigenous inhabitants has only gone from bad to worse, activists say.

Under the former army captain, average annual deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has risen by 75 percent compared to the previous decade, as the government has slashed environmental funding by 71 percent from its high in 2014.

Along the way, Bolsonaro has fired or sidelined government officials who pushed back against his environmental policies, attacked foreign critics with nationalist rhetoric about Brazilian sovereignty over "our Amazon," and played to his hardline base and backers in the powerful agribusiness industry with calls to make the rainforest an engine of economic development.

While Lula's own environmental record is hardly spotless, activists say there is no comparison between the two.

"We're facing a radical choice: decide whether the Amazon lives or gets a death sentence with Bolsonaro's reelection," said Marcio Astrini, head of the Climate Observatory, a coalition of environmental groups.

"This is the most important election in Brazilian history."

- 'Not a good thing' -

Environmental issues have taken a back seat to economic and social ones in the campaign.

But with the world scrambling to hold global warming to a livable limit, the issue matters beyond Brazil.

The Amazon basin, 60 percent of which is in Brazil, is looking fragile.

Research shows the world's biggest rainforest, which until recently helped soak up humanity's soaring carbon emissions, is now strained to the point it has started releasing more carbon than it absorbs.

A hemisphere away, US climate scientist Scott Denning says he doesn't follow Brazilian politics, but is closely watching what happens in the Amazon, whose CO2 emissions doubled in Bolsonaro's first two years -- reaching the equivalent of five percent of global fossil-fuel emissions.

"Four more years like that, and that's quite a lot of CO2. That's not a good thing," said Denning, an atmospheric scientist at Colorado State University.

"The Amazon is this humongous living carbon sponge. But now we're cutting and burning the trees faster than they can regrow."

The timing is terrible, he noted.

"The rest of the world is scrambling to cut our fossil-fuel emissions... and Bolsonaro is pulling in the opposite direction."

- Lula's imperfect record -

In a statement, Bolsonaro's campaign defended his record on the Amazon as "balancing environmental protection with economic growth."

Lula, who leads in the polls, has himself faced criticism for his environmental record, which notably included the controversial decision to build the massive Belo Monte hydroelectric dam in the Amazon.

In Lula's first year in office, deforestation reached 27,772 square kilometers (10,723 square miles) in the Brazilian Amazon -- the second-worst year on record, and far higher than the 13,038 square kilometers under Bolsonaro last year.

However, by the end of his term, Lula's government had slashed deforestation by 75 percent, to historic lows.

Under Bolsonaro, it has sharply increased.

Lula got a key endorsement two weeks ago when respected former environment minister Marina Silva -- who quit his government in disgust in 2008 over the leftist's Amazon policies -- announced she was backing him.

The environment "isn't exactly close to Lula's heart," says veteran activist Claudio Angelo, who worked on Silva's unsuccessful 2018 presidential campaign.

But Lula's camp knows it has the upper hand on the issue.

The ex-metal worker has vowed to go "even further" than Brazil's emission-cutting targets under the 2015 Paris Accord, revive the internationally backed, $1.3-billion Amazon Fund to protect the rainforest -- suspended under Bolsonaro -- and work to achieve net-zero deforestation.


Related Links
Democracy in the 21st century at TerraDaily.com


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DEMOCRACY
Brazil more isolated after four years of Bolsonaro
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) Sept 21, 2022
The video was painful to watch, but spoke volumes to Brazil's isolation on the world stage: President Jair Bolsonaro awkwardly meandering alone around the room as other G20 leaders chatted amiably in Rome last year. Political analysts say the international influence of Latin American giant Brazil has shrunk under Bolsonaro, the far-right incumbent fighting an uphill battle to win re-election next month. His ideologically driven foreign policy and disregard for diplomatic etiquette have overshado ... read more

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