The Guardian view on Jair Bolsonaro: a danger to Brazilians
Editorial
The president is wrecking his countrys attempts to contain the spread of coronavirus
Tue 31 Mar 2020 14.30 EDT
Much of Brazil is now shut down. Governors impose rigorous quarantines. The health minister urges people to stay at home, warning that unless transmission is curbed the health system will collapse by the end of April. Even drug gangs lock down favelas to stop the spread of coronavirus. Meanwhile, a citizen decries the restrictions and heads out for a stroll at a local market. Facebook and Twitter remove his posts for touting unproven remedies and attacking physical distancing. One man cannot normally cause too much damage. Unfortunately, this one is the president.
Jair Bolsonaros ascent was always frightening, and his record since taking power last year with attacks on human rights, minorities, the arts, and destruction of the Amazon has been shameful. His response to coronavirus has plumbed new depths. Many governments will have to answer for their mistakes and complacency when the pandemic is over. Mr Bolsonaros performance is in a league of its own.
He has repeatedly dismissed coronavirus as just a little flu or a bit of a cold, and as a media trick or fantasy. Having finally acknowledged its reality, he has told people to face it like fucking men, not kids. Well all die one day, and urged the country to get back to normal as if such a thing were possible. Meeting and greeting his citizens in Brasília last weekend was doubly irresponsible, given his close contact with known coronavirus cases: the danger is not only the messages he has sent, but the physical risk he could pose to others. (Fox News recently reported that Mr Bolsonaros son said his father had tested positive, though this was later denied.)
The governor of São Paulo, Brazils most populous and economically powerful state, has told the public not to follow the presidents guidance. Mr Bolsonaros own health minister reportedly warned he would have to publicly contradict him, apparently backing down only after he was threatened with the sack.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/mar/31/the-guardian-view-on-jair-bolsonaro-a-danger-to-brazilians
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