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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Staff and agencies in São Paulo

Brazil police indict Bolsonaro over alleged falsification of vaccination data

a man in a yellow jersey looks backward as people surround him with flags and their phones held high
Jair Bolsonaro is surrounded by supporters in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Saturday. Photograph: Silvia Izquierdo/AP

Brazil’s federal police have accused Jair Bolsonaro of criminal association and falsifying his own Covid-19 vaccination data, marking the first indictment for the embattled far-right leader with others potentially in store.

The supreme court on Tuesday released the police’s indictment which alleges Bolsonaro and 16 others inserted false information into the public health database to make it appear as though the former president, his 12-year-old daughter and several others in his circle had received the Covid-19 vaccine.

During the pandemic, Bolsonaro was one of the few world leaders railing against the vaccine, openly flouting health restrictions and encouraging society to follow his example. His administration ignored several emails from the pharmaceutical company Pfizer offering to sell Brazil tens of millions of shots in 2020 and openly criticized a move by São Paulo state’s then governor, João Doria, to buy vaccines from the Chinese company Sinovac when no jabs were otherwise available.

Brazil’s prosecutor-general’s office will have the final say on whether to use the police indictment to file charges against Bolsonaro at the supreme court. It stems from one of several investigations targeting Bolsonaro, who governed between 2019 and 2022.

The former president reiterated that he had not taken the Covid-19 vaccine and said he was calm. “It’s a selective investigation. I’m calm, I don’t owe anything,” Bolsonaro told Reuters. “The world knows that I didn’t take the vaccine.”

Police accuse Bolsonaro and his aides of tampering with the health ministry’s database shortly before he traveled to the US in December 2022, two months after he lost his re-election bid to Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Bolsonaro needed a certificate of vaccination to enter the US, where he remained for the final days of his term and the first months of Lula’s term.

If convicted for falsifying health data, the 68-year-old politician could spend up to 12 years behind bars, and as little as two years, according to legal analyst Zilan Costa. The maximum jail time for a charge of criminal association is four years, he said.

Bolsonaro retains staunch allegiance among his base, as shown by an outpouring of support last month, with an estimated 185,000 people clogging São Paulo’s main boulevard to decry what they – and the former president – characterize as political persecution.

Brazil’s top electoral court has already ruled Bolsonaro ineligible until 2030, on the grounds that he abused his power during the 2022 campaign and cast unfounded doubts on the country’s electronic voting system.

Other investigations include one seeking to determine whether Bolsonaro tried to sneak two sets of expensive diamond jewelry into Brazil and prevent them from being incorporated into the presidency’s public collection. Another relates to his alleged involvement in the 8 January 2023 uprising in the capital, Brasília, soon after Lula took power, that resembled the Capitol riot in Washington two years earlier. He has denied wrongdoing in both cases.

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