Brazilian Judge Orders Newspaper Columnist to Shut Up or Pay Up

Brazilian actress Juliana Paes Brazilian Judge João Paulo Capanema de Souza, of Rio de Janeiro's 24th Special Civil Court, ordered, on July 15, columnist José Simão, of the daily newspaper Folha de S. Paulo, to refrain from making references to TV Globo actress Juliana Paes in his humor writings or he would be subject to a fine of US$ 5,000.

Paes filed a complaint against the columnist and the newspaper after Simão made humorous analogies between her and her character in a soap opera. Making reference to the characters Indian caste (casta, in Portuguese), Simão wrote that in real life Paes is "not chaste at all" (also casta in Portuguese). The actress said the columnist had exceeded permissible limits, affecting her and her family's honor.

The Folha de S. Paulo's lawyers, Taí­s Gasparian and Mônica Galvão, view the judge's decision as having dealt with humor as though it is unlawful, "which amounts to censorship".

Simão has said he will not apologize because he does not believe the word "casta" to be offensive. He went on to say that the ruling against him affects freedom of expression.

In a separate development, on 16 July, freelance photographer Antônio Carlos Argemi was arrested by the police as he covered a demonstration by public school teachers in front of the home of Governor Yeda Crusius. The incident took place in Porto Alegre, the capital city of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, in southern Brazil.

Rio Grande do Sul's Journalists' Union reported that Argemi was accused of disrespecting the authorities and was taken to the police station, where he was questioned and then released. Argemi has said he will file a complaint regarding the incident.

Other journalists were also prevented from covering the demonstration. According to José Marí­a Rodrigues Nunes, the journalists' union president, the police cordoned off the area to keep reporters away. Six demonstrators were also detained.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Come January, Brazil Adds Biodiesel to Its Tanks

Brazil is getting ready to take a big leap in the direction of the ...

Majority of Brazilians Think Violence and Poverty Are Getting Worse

The 80th CNT/Sensus poll reports that 78.8% of the 2,000 people it interviewed in ...

Brazil Shows Its Best at German Dental Show

This year there will be almost four times as many Brazilian orthodontic equipment and ...

US Pilots Association Urges Brazil to Release American Pilots

The Allied Pilots Association (APA), collective bargaining agent for the 13,000 pilots of American ...

Brazil’s Scots Invited to Lend a Hand to Historical Tapestry Project

Expatriate Scots and descendants of Scottish immigrants across the world are being invited to ...

Brazilian Elections Theme of Business Breakfast in New York

Weil, Gotshal & Manges, the international law firm headquartered in New York, will serve ...

Brazilian Congressmen in Japan Probing Charges of Dekasseguis’ Mistreatment

According to Brazilian psychologist and psychoanalyst, Taeco Toma Carignato, the members of Brazil’s Joint Parliamentary ...

Carnaval Biz: It Brings Close to US$ 500,000 to Rio, Brazil

The Rio de Janeiro Carnaval celebration, in Brazil, is certainly spectacular. It is also ...

The uniquely Brazilian musical genre known as choro is the big star of new label Acari Records.

The Brazilian Internet explosion was so fast that in only five years the Brazilians ...

Massive Blackout Hits Brazil. Sí£o Paulo, Rio, 5 Other States in the Dark

 A massive blackout has hit Brazil this Tuesday night, November 10, around 10:15 pm, after hydroelectric ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`