Fri | Jul 3, 2026
BRAZIL

A year after pro-Bolsonaro riots, country is still recovering

Published:Monday | January 8, 2024 | 12:06 AM
Supporters of Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro hold a banner that with a message that reads in Portuguese ‘Military Intervention’, as they storm  the National Congress building in Brasilia, Brazil, on January 8, 2023.
Supporters of Brazil’s former President Jair Bolsonaro hold a banner that with a message that reads in Portuguese ‘Military Intervention’, as they storm the National Congress building in Brasilia, Brazil, on January 8, 2023.

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP):

Brazil’s Congress has everything ready to open an exhibit on Monday featuring pieces including a tapestry crafted by renowned artist Burle Marx and a replica of the country’s constitution dated 1988.

The display is notable not because of the rarity of the objects, but because they are the living memory of one of the grimmest episodes in Brazil’s recent history: As unprecedented riots in support of former President Jair Bolsonaro took place on January 8, 2023, in government buildings in the capital Brasilia, the tapestry was damaged and the replica constitution was taken.

Many saw the rioting as part of a failed attempt by Bolsonaro to remain in power following his election loss. A year and hundreds of arrests later, Brazil is still recovering.

“Brazil’s society still doesn’t know how to handle what happened, there’s no consensus,” said Creomar de Souza, founder of political risk consultancy Dharma Politics. “Brazil’s society is now in extreme opposites. And parts of those opposites are in a place that they cannot reconcile with the other.”

Mimicking the January 6, 2021 insurrection by defenders of outgoing US President Donald Trump at the Capitol in Washington, thousands of Bolsonaro’s supporters stormed the presidential palace, Congress and the Supreme Court buildings in one of the biggest challenges to Latin America’s most populous democracy.

A year later, around 400 people out of about 1,500 remain jailed, facing charges for the riots, and Bolsonaro has been under investigation by the Supreme Court over his role in the mayhem. But the country is still reeling from an episode that some say they are proud of.

GUARDRAILS RESTORED

Members of the three branches of power in Brazil say democracy and its guardrails have been restored after the trashing of the government buildings. But arrests have led supporters of the former president to say their freedom of speech is being violated and claim they are politically persecuted.

Some of them have also voiced unfounded claims that the riots were actually led by the current administration and its supporters. Bolsonaro made the same claim in an interview on Saturday.

Rio de Janeiro-based businessman Pablo Diniz, 44, rejects calling all protesters in Brasilia that day rioters. He even believes the discussion of January 8 is not about democracy.

“There was a bit of everything there. There were people claiming for their rights. There were infiltrated people,” he said. “There were some good old ladies there, people who are patriots. I am a patriot … . I went to the streets [on January 8] too, peacefully. I was there to fight for democracy for all.”

Bolsonaro was barred by a court last year from running for office again until 2030, in a case not related to the riots, but to his unfounded claims that the electronic voting system in the past presidential election was rigged. Despite that, his far-right base remains numerous on the streets and feels capable of challenging President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Pollster Quaest said 89 per cent of Brazilians see the events of January 8 negatively. Some 47 per cent believe Bolsonaro was somehow involved in the riots. The poll heard 2,012 people between December 14-18. The margin of error is 2.2 percentage points.

On Monday, Lula and other officials will gather in Congress for the peculiar exhibit, called ‘Unshakeable Democracy’, in a symbolic ceremony aimed at reassuring Brazilians of the strength of their democratic system of government.

Lula told Brazilian media outlets on Friday that Monday’s event could help to show how Brazilians should work to be able to live “the entire 21st century without any coup d’état.

Following the events on January 8, Brazil’s Senate paid about $40,000 to recover the tapestry made in 1973, which was stained by urine and torn in pieces. Supreme Court justices initially feared the replica of the constitution had been stolen after a Bolsonaro supporter was filmed allegedly carrying it outside of the building. But days after the insurrection they found the real piece hidden in one of the building’s museums.