Brazilians Bolsonaro’s supporters Stormed Capital Akin To Trump's January 6.....

[SIZE=7]Lula vows to punish Brazilian Congress invaders[/SIZE]
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Police used tear gas in an attempt to repel protesters
By Katy Watson in São Paulo and George Wright in London
BBC News

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva says perpetrators will be found and punished after supporters of Brazilian far-right ex-President Jair Bolsonaro stormed Congress.
The dramatic scenes come a week after the left-wing veteran’s inauguration.
Supporters of Mr Bolsonaro - who refuse to accept that he lost the election - broke through police barriers in the capital, Brasília.
Police used tear gas but failed to repel the demonstrators.

Mr da Silva - better known as Lula - said there was “no precedent in the history of our country” for the scenes seen at Congress and at the Supreme Court.
He called the violence the “acts of vandals and fascists”.

Protesters have smashed windows, while others reached the Senate chamber, where they jumped on to seats and used benches as slides.
It is unclear if they are still in the building.
Footage on social media shows protesters pulling a policeman from his horse and attacking him outside the building.
Lima, a 27-year-old production engineer, said: "We need to re-establish order after this fraudulent election.
“I’m here for history, for my daughters,” she told the AFP news agency.
Many are drawing comparisons with the storming of the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 by supporters of Donald Trump, an ally of Mr Bolsonaro.

Mr Bolsonaro’s supporters are calling for military intervention and the resignation of Lula, who defeated his far-right rival in October’s election.
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Many of them created camps in cities across Brazil, some of them outside the military barracks. That’s because his most ardent supporters want the military to intervene and make good elections that they say were stolen.
It looked like their movement had been curbed by Lula’s inauguration - the camps in Brasilia had been dismantled and there was no disruption on the day he was sworn in.
But Sunday’s scenes show that those predictions were premature.
Justice and Public Security Minister Flavio Dino called the invasion “an absurd attempt to impose [the protesters’] will by force”.
“It will not prevail,” he wrote on Twitter.

Leaders from Latin America have condemned the violence.
Chilean President Gabriel Boric said Brazil has its “full support in the face of this cowardly and vile attack on democracy”.
Colombian President Gustavo Petro said “fascism has decided to stage a coup”, while Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said Mexico expresses “full support for President Lula’s administration, elected by popular will”.
Lula is currently on an official trip in São Paulo state.
In his inauguration speech, he vowed to rebuild a country in “terrible ruins”.
He decried the policies of his predecessor, who went to the US to avoid the handover ceremony.

[SIZE=7]Scenes from Brasília as Bolsonaro’s supporters storm the congress[/SIZE]
Story by Washington Post Staff • 1h ago

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQmvuu7nuUU:5

Scores of supporters of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro stormed the headquarters of the National Congress in the country’s capital on Sunday in a scene reminiscent of the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of then U.S. President Donald J. Trump.

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Scenes from Brasília as Bolsonaro’s supporters storm the congress© Andre Borges/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Here’s a look at how the scene unfolded.
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Scenes from Brasília as Bolsonaro’s supporters storm the congress© Andre Borges/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
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Bolsonaro supporters storm the National Congress.© Andre Borges/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
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Hundreds of supporters of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro invaded the headquarters of the National Congress.© Andre Borges/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
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Hundreds of supporters of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro invaded the headquarters of the National Congress, and also Supreme Court and the Planalto Palace.© Andre Borges/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
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Bolsonaro supporters storm the National Congress in Brasilia.© Andre Borges/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
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Supporters of Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro demonstrate against President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, outside Brazil’s National Congress.© Adriano Machado/Reuters
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Protesters, supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro, clash with police during a protest outside the Planalto Palace building in Brasilia, Brazil, Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023. Others demonstrators stormed congress and the Supreme Court. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres)© Eraldo Peres/AP
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Supporters of Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro take part in a protest against President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.© Adriano Machado/Reuters
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A demonstration held by supporters of Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro against President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is pictured through a broken window.© Adriano Machado/Reuters

Upuss

[SIZE=7]Bolsonaro’s new life as a Florida man: Fast food runs and selfies[/SIZE]
Story by Tim Craig • 1h ago

KISSIMMEE, Fla. — Far from the chaos in his homeland, former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro has found refuge among a swell of supporters in an unexpected location: An Orlando suburb near Disney World.

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Bolsonaro’s new life as a Florida man: Fast food runs and selfies

The controversial leader whose supporters stormed Brazil’s National Congress building, Supreme Federal Court and presidential office on Sunday landed in the Sunshine State shortly before President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was sworn into office.
In the week since, he has been spotted waiting in line at Publix, eating alone at Kentucky Fried Chicken and posing for selfies with the bevy of fans who show up at the modest, two-story home where he is staying.
“My kids, they didn’t want to see Mickey Mouse, they wanted to see Bolsonaro,” Leandro Neiva, a Brazilian dentist said as he, his wife and their two young children waited to greet Bolsonaro on Friday. “He is just like us. He could be at Mar-a-Lago with Trump, but he is here in Orlando, and everybody knows he is here.”

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Fans gather around former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro on Saturday in Kissimmee, Fla. (Thomas Simonetti for The Washington Post)

Bolsonaro’s Florida sojourn has become a flash point as scrutiny mounts over the most significant threat to Brazil’s democracy since the 1964 military coup. Lula has accused his predecessor of “encouraging” the attack through social media “from Miami, where he went to relax” — an accusation Bolsonaro denies.

“In fact, he ran away so he wouldn’t have to pass the sash to me,” Lula quipped in a speech Sunday night after the attack.

Now some U.S. Democrats are calling on President Biden to rescind his visa, saying the former Brazilian leader shouldn’t be allowed to stay in Florida. Bolsonaro has not been charged with any wrongdoing, but some analysts say he could face future criminal probes on unrelated matters now that he no longer has presidential immunity.

“He’s a dangerous man. They should send him back to his home country of Brazil,” Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Tex.) said during an appearance on CNN, adding Bolsonaro “used the Trump playbook.”

As he signed autographs from his supporters, at least one of whom flew from New York to try to see him, Bolsonaro declined to comment Friday about his time in Florida except to say the crowd of well-wishers was a sign that “everybody loves me.”

While in Brazil Bolsonaro is both loathed and revered, here expats overwhelmingly favor the man dubbed the “Trump of the Tropics.” They voted overwhelmingly to reelect him from expat ballot boxes in Miami. Like some supporters of former president Donald Trump, a contingent of Bolsonaro fans believe the election was stolen — without any evidence. Ahead of the vote, Bolsonaro said that if he were to lose, it could only be through fraud.

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Eduardo Ceschin displays the shirt he asked former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro to sign in Kissimmee, Fla., on Saturday.
(Thomas Simonetti for The Washington Post)

Bolsonaro has given no indication how long he plans to stay in Florida, a state that has long served as a haven for foreign leaders escaping political or legal turmoil at home.

Over the last century, strongmen and former leaders from Venezuela, Haiti, Cuba, Peru and Bolivia have relocated to the state, often buying property and seamlessly blending in with other expats from Latin and South America, some until their final days. Cuban dictator Gerardo Machado is buried at a cemetery in Miami’s Little Havana.

Brian Winter, editor of Americas Quarterly and an expert on Latin American politics, said it is not uncommon for former Brazilian presidents to leave the country around the time of a successor’s inauguration. But in this case, Winter believes that Bolsonaro may be preparing to seek exile to avoid criminal prosecution in Brazil, although he cautions he may ultimately seek refuge in a country other than the United States.

“He has not officially been charged with a crime yet, so for now this is either an attempt to get away or a self-imposed exile, depending on who you believe,” Winter said. “I lean more toward the idea that it is the beginning of an exile, especially after what happened on Sunday.”

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A group of supporters pose for a photo outside the home where Bolsonaro is staying at in Kissimmee on Saturday.
(Thomas Simonetti for The Washington Post)

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Osvaldo Junior records a video with one phone and video chats with family in Brazil on the other as former Bolsonaro
greets supporters on Saturday. (Thomas Simonetti for The Washington Post)

Bolsonaro is staying in a house owned by Brazilian mixed martial arts fighter José Aldo da Silva Oliveira at the Encore Resort at Reunion, a gated community located off a highway that leads to Disney World. He has been chauffeured around suburban Orlando in a white Lexus and has appeared to be living an exceptionally modest lifestyle for a former president.

In the days before Sunday’s attack, Bolsonaro would emerge every few hours to thunderous applause. Then, Portuguese-speaking security guards — one of whom wore U.S. Army cap — would ask the crowd of well-wishers to form a single file line as Bolsonaro greeted each of them, signing autographs and shaking hands. Some of the fans were Brazilians on vacation, others expats who back his conservative government and are enraged by Lula’s victory.

“We are in trouble now,” said Deborah Sartori, 48, who broke down in tears after meeting Bolsonaro. “I think Lula stole the election … and now we are worried about the future of Brazil.”

Lula “wants to make the entire South America, and Central America like one big country,” Antonio Fernando Mariz, 70, a Brazilian American who lives in Clearwater, Fla., said after Bolsonaro signed his T-shirt on Friday. “I was thinking about buying a property in Brazil, but now, absolutely not!”

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Joao Elias waits in line to see Bolsonaro on Saturday. (Thomas Simonetti for The Washington Post)

Bolsonaro’s location in Orlando has quickly spread on social media, helping to turn the Encore Resort at Reunion into a quasi-pilgrimage for his supporters.

One Brazilian social media star and pastor with more than 1 million Instagram followers, Junior Trovão, said he was on vacation in Florida and decided to stop by Bolsonaro’s vacation property after seeing other posts on social media about the former president’s whereabouts.

“I came to talk to my president and see my president,” said Trovão, who posed for a selfie with Bolsonaro, alongside his family. “He is one of the most beloved presidents Brazil has ever had. Everyone loves him. Do you think any other president would do this?”

As he shared images of his day on Instagram, Trovão said he doesn’t fault Bolsonaro for fleeing to Orlando and that he hopes Bolsonaro stays as long as he wants, noting he can use social media to maintain contact with his supporters back in Brazil.

“I think at the right time he will go back,” Trovão said.

Paulo Blikstein, the director of the Lemann Center for Brazilian Studies at Columbia University, said Bolsonaro could easily continue to use Florida as a base from which he could rile up his supporters and use social media to “spread disinformation.”

“I think Bolsonaro might just decide to stay in the U.S. and, doing internet stuff, spread disinformation and keep his supporters happy,” he said. “He could stay in the U.S. for a long time and still be an important voice in Brazil.”

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Protesters clash with police during a protest outside the Planalto Palace building in Brasilia, on Sunday.© Eraldo Peres/AP

Though Sunday’s insurrection was eerily similar to the chaos unleashed in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021, some are cautioning against making too direct of comparisons between Bolsonaro and Trump.

Winter noted there is no indication that Bolsonaro urged his supporters to storm government buildings, and he did issue a public statement condemning those actions as chaos was unfolding.

“Bolsonaro did not did not stand in front of the Brazilian Congress and urge his followers to go show their strength,” he said. “He was 4,000 miles away, and at least in public, silent on Sunday.”

Yet, Winter believes the scenes of mob violence in Brasilia has increased the pressure on prosecutors to charge Bolsonaro with a crime.

“If Bolsonaro is trying to play the long game, it got more complicated after Sunday,” Winter said. “Most of the people who previously advocated leniency are now saying, ‘If we don’t prosecute, we will continue to run into problems like we did on Sunday.’”

If he is charged, Winter believes Bolsonaro would try to claim exile, either in the United States or perhaps in Europe. If in the United States, Winter doubts the Biden administration would grant it. Bolsonaro’s best hope, he said, could be to the drag out the process until after the 2024 presidential election.

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Michel Pires, right, stands among a group of Bolsonaro supporters waiting outside his residence on Saturday.
(Thomas Simonetti for The Washington Post)

“If Interpol is after him, I don’t think Joe Biden’s America would shelter him,” Winter said. “But Ron DeSantis’s America might.”

What type of visa he entered the country with remains unclear. Reuters reported that Bolsonaro likely utilized an A-1 visa, which is given to diplomats and government leaders participating in official activities. State Department spokesman Ned Price declined to discuss the details of any individual’s visa situation, citing privacy rules. But he noted that holders of an A-1 visa present in the U.S. have 30 days following the cessation of their official status to apply for a different visa. After that, they are subject to removal by the Department of Homeland Security.

Fabio de Sa e Silva, a professor of Brazilian studies at University of Oklahoma, said the Biden administration could revoke Bolsonaro’s visa at any point.

“There is no need for any formal procedure or formal request from the Brazilian government or any authority,” he said. “It’s entirely within the discretion of the U.S. administration.”

On Monday, Brazilian newspaper O Globo reported that Bolsonaro had been admitted to AdventHealth Celebration, a hospital in Kissimmee, complaining of severe abdominal pain. He has been hospitalized several times since being stabbed during a campaign rally in 2018. A hospital representative declined to confirm his admission or share any details about his condition.

If Bolsonaro does attempt to remain in Florida, Orlando would be a telling destination. While earlier generations of Brazilian expats flocked to South Florida, community leaders say Orlando has increasingly drawn a growing number of compatriots.

“We say Orlando is the best city of Brazil,” Marcello Ribeiro, 37, a Brazilian who moved to Orlando two years ago said as he waited to meet Bolsonaro on Saturday. “Florida is a very nice place, and the weather in Orlando is very similar to Brazil.”

According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2021 American Community Survey, there are about 115,000 Brazilians in Florida, representing 22 percent of all Brazilians living in the U.S. Brazilians bought $700 million in Florida real estate from August 2020 to July 2021, trailing only Canadians, Argentines and Colombians in statewide home purchases during that period, a report from the Florida Realtors, a trade association, found.

Several Brazilian Bolsonaro supporters said that besides the weather, Brazilians are increasingly drawn to Florida because it has a reputation for being a hub of conservatism, including being the home of both Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis (R).

“I think now for me, Florida is the best place in the United States because with Biden, and here we have Republicans and I think it is more safe and better,” said Michel Pires, 49, who sold his furniture store in Brazil last year and bought a house in the Encore Resort at Reunion.

But there are signs that some residents and visitors to the community have become uneasy over the spectacle that now plays out daily in front of Bolsonaro’s residence.

One woman complained to the resort security on Saturday that the crowds threatened to derail her wedding. She was scheduled to get married at a gazebo in the resort and the crowd of Bolsonaro supporters was in direct line of sight for her photographs.

“I don’t even know this man, but these people are going to be in my wedding photos,” the woman, who identified herself only as Heather, pleaded with Bolsonaro’s security guards.

Besides the commotion in front of his residence, Bolsonaro appears to have mostly gone unnoticed.

On New Year’s Eve, a video of Bolsonaro eating alone at a KFC restaurant went viral. When a Post reporter visited the restaurant over the weekend, the staff said they did not know Bolsonaro had been there.

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A corner of a Brazilian flag hangs outside a car near where Bolsonaro is staying. (Thomas Simonetti for The Washington Post)

“Did he have security guards with him?” Karen Jones, the shift supervisor, asked after being shown a photograph of eating next to the photo montage of KFC’s founder, Colonel Harland Sanders. “It was definitely this store … I am sure we may have seen other famous people in here but we don’t even know it.”

At least for now, Bolsonaro’s Brazilian supporters know exactly where they can find him.

Maria Lucia, 65, works as a home health aide in New York City and spent $362 on a plane ticket so she could fly to Orlando over the weekend. She wrapped herself in a Brazilian flag and waited patiently for Bolsonaro to wander out of his house to greet about 200 well-wishers.

Bolsonaro, wearing blue jeans and a soccer jersey, hugged Lucia as he signed her flag.

“I will hang this in my apartment,” said Lucia, as she beamed over the encounter. “What other president would do this?”

Emmanuel Felton, Karen DeYoung, Annabelle Timsit, Júlia Ledur, Paulina Villegas, Razzan Nakhlawi and Scott Clement contributed to this report.