Vasudevan Sridharan
Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff is engaged in hectic
lobbying to win the support of lawmakers ahead of a crucial vote in the
lower house of Congress over her impeachment. Tens of thousands of
supporters of Rousseff and those against her have started gathering
outside the Congress building prior to the voting in the Chamber of
Deputies on 17 April which would decide whether the matter will be taken
up by the Senate.
The embattled Latin American leader
has been facing impeachment proceedings for fiddling with government
accounts in 2014 just ahead of elections in order to paint a rosy
picture of the country's economy. Rousseff argues that tweaking
government accounts was not illegal and a routine practice. She called
the impeachment action a "coup" engineered by her political opponents.
Security arrangements have been stepped up across the
capital Brasilia to prevent any untoward incident ahead of the voting.
If two thirds of the chamber vote against the president, which seems
likely under the current circumstances, the matter will go to the Senate
and bestow the power on the vice president.
"They want to convict an innocent woman and save the
corrupt," wrote Rousseff in the newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo, just ahead
of the lower house vote. "This is a coup against the republic, against
democracy and above all against the votes of all Brazilians who
participated in the electoral process."
The lower house has been holding dramatic sessions since Friday (15 April) with heated debates going through the night on Saturday (16 April).
Also campaigning for Rousseff is her political mentor and
former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who himself was accused of
wrongdoing. He told government supporters: "It seems to me that the
Brazilian elite don't like democracy. When the poor started to climb up
onto the social ladder, they were made uncomfortable."
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