Brazilians protest Lula's prison anniversary
April 8, 2019Several thousand people gathered Sunday outside the prison where former Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is being held to protest for his release.
The protest took place in Curitiba on the anniversary of the former leader's conviction and imprisonment. Demonstrators began the rally at a bus station two kilometers (1.2 miles) before making their way to the prison, which is in the same building as the headquarters of the Federal Police.
Protesters chanted "Free Lula!" and also denounced the current right-wing government of President Jair Bolsonaro.
Organizers said some 10,000 people attended the protest. Military police however put the figure at 3,000 to 5,000. Similar rallies were held in other cities, including Sao Paulo and Belo Horizonte.
Read more: Lula: Brazil's bitter divide personified
Lula's case is 'groundless'
Fernando Haddad, a former presidential candidate who belongs to Lula's left-wing Workers Party, spoke out against Lula's sentencing.
"The case against him is groundless, in our view. So we will continue to demonstrate and fight for his rights," he said.
In a letter read out by Workers' Party President Gleisi Hoffmann, Lula said his imprisonment was "unjust" and designed to keep him from returning to the presidency.
"They never presented a shred of evidence against me. I am a political prisoner, in exile inside my own country," Lula said.
Long prison sentence
The former president, who governed from 2003 to 2010, was convicted of corruption and money laundering for his role the massive "Lava Jato" (car wash) corruption scandal that has rocked Brazil and implicated politicians in more than 10 other Latin American countries.
Prosecutors say Lula accepted a beachfront apartment from construction giant Odebrecht in exchange for a lucrative contract with state-owned oil company Petrobras.
Lula is currently serving a 12-year sentence. If additional charges against him are confirmed, he could spend a further 12 years in prison.
jcg/amp (AP, AFP)