Thousands Gather in Support of Former Brazilian President as He Defies Prison Order
Da Silva was to begin serving a 12-year prison sentence Friday on a bribery conviction but he instead went to the union building in a suburb of Sao Paulo, where years earlier he had launched his career as a labor leader.
As the former leftist president entered the building, he was surrounded by thousands of supporters and members of his Workers Party, who were wearing red shirts and waving red flags. The crowd prevented police from arresting him after a judge's deadline. The police said they would not try to apprehend him overnight as negotiations to end the standoff continued.
Two sources close to da Silva told the Associated Press he would not turn himself in in Curitiba, the capital of the southern Brazilian state of Parana, as ordered by the judge. Instead, the sources said he is considering waiting for police at the union headquarters or presenting himself in Sao Paulo later Saturday.
Da Silva's lawyers filed an injunction late Friday with the Supreme Court to suspend the sentence after losing an argument in the country's second highest court that they had not exhausted procedural appeals.
The sentence will probably end the political career of Brazil's first working class president. Brazilian law prohibits a candidate from running for office for eight years after a criminal conviction. There have been rare exceptions, however, and a final decision would be made by the highest electoral court if he officially files to be a candidate.
Da Silva's mass appeal propelled him to two terms as president between 2003 and 2011, a period of strong economic growth and diminishing inequality. When he left office, his approval rating was 83-percent.
This story was written by VOANEWS.