After Fall of 6th Minister Brazil Opposition Applauds Honesty of New Sports Minister

Aldo Rebelo Brazilian congressman Aldo Rebelo from the Communist Party of Brazil (PC do B) is Brazil’s new Sports Minister replacing Orlando Silva also from PC do B, who resigned on Wednesday after accusations that he was involved in an embezzlement scheme in the ministry. The choice was praised by the opposition, who called Rebelo a honest and fair politician.

“I accepted the invitation, and the transition process will still have to start”, said Rebelo. The new minister told reporters that the president requested that he commit himself to take care of matters  related to the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics to be hosted by Brazil.

“The orientation is to try to guide the ministry with the challenges that are ahead for the country and the ministry – the World Cup, Olympics and all related tasks not only with the programs of the ministry, but also with these international events that will be hosted byBrazil,” he said.

Asked about the relationship we have with the International Federation of Soccer (FIFA) and the Brazilian Soccer Confederation (CBF), he replied that in the meeting, the president “did not go into the details of the ministry.”

With the announcement, on Tuesday, October 25, by Supreme Court associate justice, Carmen Lucia, that the court would examine charges made by the office of the government’s chief prosecutor against the minister of Sports, Orlando Silva, the position of the minister was no longer sustainable and he ended up resigning yesterday afternoon during a meeting with president Dilma Rousseff.

Silva is a member of the Communist Party of Brazil, a political party that has been a longtime ally of PT campaigns and administrations (Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Dilma Rousseff), and normal procedure would be for the party to nominate a substitute.

Orlando Silva is the sixth minister to leave the Dilma Rousseff government since June, the fifth charged with corruption. Two weeks ago a military policeman, João Dias Ferreira, accused the minister of embezzling public funds from a government program, Second Half (Segundo Tempo) that provided poor, at-risk children with sports equipment and activities after school in order to keep them off the streets.

The accusations of embezzlement from the Second Half program also include Silva’s predecessor as minister of Sports, Agnelo Queiroz, now the governor of the Federal District (Brasilia). Justice Carmen Lucia ordered the case against Agnelo Queiroz removed from the federal appeals court (“STJ”) and sent to the Supreme Court. According to the government’s chief prosecutor, Roberto Gurgel, there is an “intense relation” in the cases against Silva and Queiroz.

Following the meeting with president Dilma Rousseff, Orlando Silva told journalists that his five years as minister of Sports “…could not be tossed into a garbage can.” He declared that he was innocent of the charges of misappropriation of public funds and would prove it.

Orlando Silva is the sixth minister to step down this year and the fifth to be forced out over ethics breaches that have become a major headache for Rousseff in her first year in office, though the resignations have bolstered her reputation as a no-nonsense manager who is tough on corruption.

Silva had strenuously denied a stream of allegations against him in the media, including that he arranged up to 40 million reais (23 million dollars) in kickbacks from government contracts to benefit himself and the Communist Party of Brazil, which is part of Rousseff’s government.

Only last Friday, Rousseff said she was backing Silva to continue in his post after hearing his explanations in a meeting at the presidential palace.

Bzz/ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil vs. NYT: The Times Misbehaved

The NYT’s arrogant attitude will just harden the attitude of Brazilians who are anti-American. ...

Lula Urges Confidence for Brazil to Get New Markets

Beginning in June, typical Brazilian items, such as coffee and thongs, will be sold ...

World Economic Forum Holds Meeting on LatAm in Brazil

The World Economic Forum (WEF) is going to hold for the first time a ...

Lúcio Flávio Pinto

Legislation from Dictatorship Makes Brazilian Journalist a Hostage

Brazilian journalist Lúcio Flávio Pinto reports from the lawless and isolated Amazon region of ...

Exports by Small Brazilian Firms Reach US$ 2.1 Billion, a Record

The participation of micro and small companies in Brazilian exports has been rising year ...

Europeans, Asians and Latin American in Brazil for Accessories Fair

Brazilian trend for the 2009 winter for costume jewelry, handbags and shoes will be ...

Brazil Spends 8% of GDP in Communications, But It’s Still Too Little

Between 1998 and 2004, the countries of Latin America advanced in the field of ...

Brazilian Tribe Might Benefit from REDD, Now Being Debated in Copenhagen

A vulnerable Brazilian tribe in the Amazon region owns carbon-trading rights in future global ...

Brazil’s Globo: a Soap Opera Global Empire

With every episode, another country falls in the web of appreciators of Brazilian audiovisual ...

Brazil’s Referendum Fever: Congress Gets More than 300 Proposals

The Brazilian referendum on banning firearms and ammunition sales revived the debate on how ...

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