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Brazilian Judiciary Runs Amok in Election Campaign PDF Print E-mail
Written by Newsroom   
Wednesday, 06 September 2006

Reporters Without Borders today condemned measures taken by courts in Brazilian capital Brasília and the southeastern state of Minas Gerais aimed at gagging the press just a few weeks before the  October 1st general elections.

"It does not take a degree in rocket science to know what Brasília's regional electoral court seems to have realized, that press revelations about candidates can have a major impact on elections," the press freedom organization said.

"But this is not a matter for the courts, unless they accept that they take orders from politicians. It is up to the public to form their opinions on the basis of the information they have a right to receive."

Judge Roberval Casemiro Belinati of the Brasília federal district electoral tribunal issued an order on August 27 banning all news media in his region from reporting the content or even referring to the existence of a conversation between two politicians that was recorded, transcribed and posted on a website.

The judge did this at the request of one of the two politicians involved, former Brasília federal district governor Joaquim Roriz. In the recorded conversation between him and his lawyer, Eri Varela, a federal parliamentary candidate, Roriz was extremely critical of parliamentary representative José Roberto Arruda, the front-runner in the current race for the Brasília governorship.

On the morning of August 27, journalist Ricardo Noblat posted the transcript of the conversation on his blog on the website of the O Estado de São Paulo ("O Estadão") newspaper.

A judicial official went to O Estadão's office in Brasília with a publication ban on the evening of the same day, but by then Arruda had already announced his intention to sue Roriz. Judge Belinati's position was that the publication of the conversation could affect the electoral prospects of the politicians involved.

On August 30, federal police burst into the offices of the weekly Jornal Hoje in Belo Horizonte (the capital of Minas Gerais state) and seized computers and other office equipment. Jornal Hoje editor Joseti Alves said his newspaper had been charged with "an electoral crime" for revealing alleged irregularities by federal parliamentary representative Carlos Melles, who used to be tourism minister.

Undistributed copies of the 9 February issue of the magazine Revista do Observatório Social were seized in Ouro Preto (also in Minas Gerais state) during the second half of August.

The issue contained a report entitled "The Stone Age" about children who work in a Minas Gerais talc mine. The copies were seized as a result of June 30 court ruling that the magazine broke a law banning the publication of photos of minors without permission. The same law also bans child labor.

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Comments (1)Add Comment
Brazil----what a strange world......
written by ch.c., September 06, 2006
Now revealing irregularities became illegal........by decision of your Justice.


Yeahhhhh ! Brazil just demonstrate to the world how much they are in favor of reducing corruptions practices.


Lamentable !

Simply because when elected, your politicians are no longer under the laws of your Justice but the verdict is made in secret votes by the other politicians and 90 % of the time the corrupted politicians are absolved......meaning they can continue to keep the same political power and continue their corruptions practices.

A tragedy for a democracy......but the DAILY way of life in Brazil.
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