Brazil’s govt to support riot enquiry after advisor scandal

Lula's top security adviser quit following broadcast of footage of him during January 8 riot

Brazil’s Institutional Relations Minister Alexandre Padilha said on Thursday the government will support a congressional inquiry into the January 8 anti-democratic riots, in which supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro stormed government buildings.

That represents a change of stance by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Siva’s administration, which so far had been opposing the inquiry to avoid shifting political focus away from its economic measures.

Padilha told reporters the government would now support the inquiry as a way to clear things up after Lula’s top national security adviser, General Marcos Goncalves Dias, resigned Wednesday amid a scandal related to the aide’s presence during the storming of government buildings in the capital.

Goncalves Dias’s resignation, which the president accepted, followed a report from CNN Brasil that included footage of him walking around the presidential palace while a mob ransacked government buildings in Brasilia on January 8.

Sources close the president said there was no doubt that Dias did not support or facilitate the invasion by supporters of former president Jair Bolsonaro in any way. Dias was head of presidential security during Lula’s two previous terms.

Although the general’s presence in the area after the invasion was previously known, Lula’s opposition says the footage indicated that the government facilitated the invaders’ entry, as it looks to bolster its request for a special committee on the invasion.

This committee would be the opposition’s main platform to push its version of events, which centers on Lula’s newly-sworn in government having colluded with the attacks in Brasilia.

Dias arrived at the presidential palace shortly after it was invaded and stayed there until the arrival of Lula that evening, after the Bolsonaro supporters had already been removed and arrested, the sources said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

One of the sources said that Dias – who was able to get invaders out the door of the presidency room and lock the armored windows – managed to do what was possible, alone.

In an interview with local broadcaster GloboNews later Wednesday, Dias said the footage released sought to link him to an army captain working for his national security agency who was filmed distributing water to the invaders in the palace.

He added that the captain and other agency staffers were removed from their positions and were under investigation by internal inquiries and by the Supreme Court.

Dias said he offered his resignation to Lula so that the investigations could take place in a transparent way.

Padilha described claims the footage showed the government had facilitated the invaders’ entry as “an absurd conspiracy theory”.

“The leaked footage brought in a new political fact so we will support the inquiry, which in my opinion will put an end to yet another conspiracy theory,” he added.

In addition to a potential congressional inquiry, Brazil’s federal police have also been investigating the riots, having carried out dozens of raids as part of an operation to identify people who participated in, funded or fostered the riots.

Reuters

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