Far-right president deemed deplorable for flouting social distancing rules again while coughing repeatedly to bolster protests amid coronavirus
Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro
Mon 20 Apr 2020 10.05 EDT
Former presidents, politicians and newspaper editorial boards have lined up to denounce the moronic and anti-democratic behaviour of Brazils far-right leader after he hit the streets to egg on protesters demanding a return to military dictatorship.
As the number of deaths caused by Covid-19 rose to nearly 2,500 on Sunday, Jair Bolsonaro left his presidential palace in Brazils capital, Brasília, to fraternize with flag-waving radicals.
Among the demands their banners listed were an end to the social distancing measures opposed by Bolsonaro, the closure of Brazils congress and supreme court, and a re-run of a dictatorship-era decree used by military rulers in the late 1960s to suffocate their political opponents.
At one point snubbing social distancing rules for the umpteenth time since the coronavirus crisis began Brazils paratrooper-turned-president clambered onto a truck to address the hundreds-strong assembly.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/20/jair-bolsonaro-dictatorship-rally-protest-brazil-president-denounced