Friday, May 1, 2020

FW: Today's WorldView: Brazil’s Bolsonaro sits on a ticking coronavirus time bomb

You know things are bad when DeSantis is the rational one! See highlight below. - C

 

From: The Washington Post <email@washingtonpost.com>
Sent: Friday, May 1, 2020 12:30 AM
To: charlie.coop47@gmail.com
Subject: Today's WorldView: Brazil's Bolsonaro sits on a ticking coronavirus time bomb

 

And under the cover of coronavirus, governments punish adversaries and reward friends

                                                                                                                                                                     

The Washington Post

Today's WorldView

 

 

Ishaan Tharoor

 

By Ishaan Tharoor
with Ruby Mellen
 Email

Brazil's Bolsonaro sits on a ticking coronavirus time bomb

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro in Brasilia on April 9. (Adriano Machado/Reuters)

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro in Brasilia on April 9. (Adriano Machado/Reuters)

On Thursday, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro continued his steady stream of coronavirus diatribes on Facebook, this time raging against the directives of the World Health Organization while bizarrely suggesting that the U.N. health agency encourages masturbation and homosexuality among children.

The post, which was removed, fits into Bolsonaro's bewildering coronavirus response — one marked by denial of the scale of the threat, anger at the lockdowns imposed by state governors, deep rifts with some of his cabinet officials, the accelerated ecological devastation of the Amazon and the steady spread of the virus in Latin America's largest and most populous nation.

The president could only muster an impatient shrug Tuesday when confronted by reporters about the country's more than 5,500 confirmed coronavirus deaths. "So what?" he said. "I'm sorry. What do you want me to do?"

Brazil has about 80,000 confirmed coronavirus cases, but experts say the real number is much higher, potentially above 1 million. Bodies are piling up in major cities as local officials anticipate a surge of cases, with the likely peak of the outbreak still weeks away. The uncertainty isn't helped by the fact that Bolsonaro's government is presiding over a woefully insufficient testing operation.

 

 

 

Brazil "tests 12 times fewer people than Iran, and 32 times fewer than the United States," my colleagues reported, a grim metric given that the United States still needs to accelerate its own testing efforts. "Hospitalized patients aren't being tested. Some medical professionals aren't being tested. People are dying in their homes without being tested."

The rest of the world is taking note. Brazil's neighbors are growing increasingly wary of the country's lax approach and fear it will become a continental super spreader. "A lot of traffic is coming from São Paulo, where the infection rate is extremely high, and it doesn't appear to me that the Brazilian government is taking it with the seriousness that it requires," Argentine President Alberto Fernández said last weekend. "That worries me a lot, for the Brazilian people and also because it can be carried to Argentina."

The Associated Press reports that Argentine officials in provinces bordering Brazil are working to set up secure corridors so that Brazilian truckers can enter the country and deliver their goods without coming into contact with Argentines. There are similar plans afoot in Uruguay. Paraguay has shut its borders and at least in one instance dug a trench between two border towns to prevent crossings. Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro — a Bolsonaro nemesis in charge of a crisis-ravaged country — vowed to ensure "an epidemiological and military barrier" along his nation's border with Brazil.

In the United States, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) warned of the risks posed by Brazilian travelers heading to his state, which is home to a large Brazilian diaspora. "Brazil has great scientific and economic capacity, but clearly its leadership has an unscientific stance on fighting coronavirus," said DeSantis.

That's a view shared by Bolsonaro's former health minister, who left his post last month under acrimonious circumstances. Bolsonaro "started to have anti-health attitudes, inciting crowds, hailing a medication that didn't have any scientific basis," Luiz Henrique Mandetta told The Washington Post, referring to the president's dismissal of the need for lockdowns and his obsession with touting the healing properties of hydroxychloroquine. "I don't think he fired me," Mandetta added. "He fired science."

But for Bolsonaro's fortunes, Mandetta's firing is less important than the departure of Sérgio Moro, the justice minister who left his post April 24 but not before he denounced Bolsonaro for seeking to install a more pliant national police chief who could theoretically hinder ongoing investigations into the president's sons. The accusations are damning and, if proved, could lead to the possible impeachment of the president, who has already lost considerable support from conservative and centrist allies over his handling of the outbreak. This week, the country's chief justice authorized an investigation into the president's alleged corruption and obstruction of justice.

 

Bolsonaro is sticking to his hard-line instincts and has railed against perceived foes, including the news media. He's counting on his energized base to dispel what political momentum there may be to oust the president. "Don't underestimate the power of tribalism in the Age of Social Media — particularly a tribe that has much of the military, the police, truckers, and other formidable groups in its corner," wrote Brian Winter in Americas Quarterly. "How will they behave if their leader is truly threatened?"

That raises unnerving questions for the future of Brazil's democracy. The Brazilian president is a well-documented admirer of his country's military dictatorship and made a fringe political career out of his contempt for the left, the poor, the indigenous and the LGBTQ community. In power, he has only weaponized those grievances.

Some analysts are optimistic that Brazil can weather that particular storm. "The system of checks and balances is working," Sergio Davila, editor in chief of Folha de S.Paulo, one of the county's preeminent newspapers, told the New Yorker. "The Supreme Court is doing its job. The Congress is doing its job. It is turning down a lot of exotic propositions from the executive."

But in the depths of the pandemic, it's not just Brazil's political system that's under stress.

 

Talking Points

 

• Even as the U.S.'s unemployment numbers skyrocket, Europe is sending proportionally fewer people into the ranks of the jobless. Why? My colleague Michael Birnbaum reports on initial signs that the decision by many European governments to subsidize worker salaries during the pandemic is proving effective.

• Making his first appearance at a news conference in over a month, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that his country is "past the peak" and "on the downward slope" of the first phase of the pandemic. He also promised that next week his government will begin to describe how the country might slowly loosen its strict lockdown. My colleagues have the details.

• You've read a lot about the geopolitical tussle between China and the United States that's taking place in the shadow of the pandemic. My colleagues delivered a stunning scoop on the latest possible escalation in this clash: "Senior U.S. officials are beginning to explore proposals for punishing or demanding financial compensation from China for its handling of the coronavirus pandemic, according to four senior administration officials with knowledge of internal planning."

 

Top of The Post

Administration describes a dash for a coronavirus vaccine that would be available in January

 

 

Live updates: More than half the states will lift coronavirus restrictions by the end of this week; armed protesters demonstrate in Michigan Capitol

 

 

Chinese lab conducted extensive research on deadly bat viruses, but there is no evidence of accidental release

 

 

Viewpoints

 

 

Behind Nayib Bukele's "shocking" turn

 

 

 

 

Free reign

Sri Lankan soldiers patrol an area under lockdown in Colombo on April 28. (Chamila Karunarathne/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

Sri Lankan soldiers patrol an area under lockdown in Colombo on April 28. (Chamila Karunarathne/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

The pardon was swift and stunning, overturning the landmark conviction of an army sergeant for massacring civilians during Sri Lanka's civil war. Human rights groups decried the move, but there were no protests. Nor were there any in-person appeals. Even a legal challenge was impossible: With all of Sri Lanka under a strict nationwide lockdown, the courts, too, were closed. 

The decision in March by Sri Lanka's newly elected president is part of a broader, disturbing trend in which governments around the world have punished opponents, rewarded friends and stifled dissent amid the global pandemic. The overwhelming nature of the fight against the disease combined with physical restrictions on citizens has meant that such actions incite less opposition at home and abroad than in the past.

In Bolivia, the government has arrested dozens of opponents under a new decree passed earlier in April. In India, authorities have pursued activists and journalists using a sweeping anti-terrorism statute. In Cambodia, at least 30 people — many of them opposition supporters — have been arrested ostensibly for spreading misinformation during the pandemic. Several governments have passed laws whose stated goal is to fight the coronavirus but that opponents say provide tools to crack down on critical voices and the media.

While emergency measures may be necessary to combat the spread of the virus, some governments "appear to be using COVID-19 as a cover for human rights violations, further restricting fundamental freedoms and civic space, and undermining the rule of law," Michelle Bachelet, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, said in a statement this week. She called such cases "deeply worrying." — Joanna Slater, Anthony Faiola and Niha Masih

Read on: Under the cover of coronavirus, governments punish adversaries and reward friends

 

1,000 Words

The idea, at first, was to bring photojournalism to the streets, bypassing the usual gatekeepers to reach an audience in the most direct way: by pasting photos on the walls of cities around the world. In the six years since the collective Dysturb began, it has used photography to inform people who may not usually pick up a newspaper or watch the news. So when the novel coronavirus started spreading worldwide, the photographers behind Dysturb took to the streets once more. Last week, they began a campaign in Paris and New York to encourage people to respect social distancing and stay-at-home orders. (Dysturb)

 

Afterword

 

 

 

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