Brazil justice annuls Lula’s sentences, enabling 2022 run
SAO PAULO — A justice from Brazil’s top court on Monday annulled all sentences against former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, which for now restores his political rights and would potentially allow him to run again for the presidency next year.
The decision also laid bare the country’s political divisions, with leftists celebrating their 75-year-old leader’s return to the political arena as conservatives said the rulings were tantamount to impunity.
Others saw the decision as an attempt to preserve a vast but embattled corruption investigation that has been accused of impropriety.
The decision by Justice Luiz Edson Fachin drew no conclusions about the mammoth “Car Wash” investigation centred on state-run giant Petrobras, from which the da Silva probes emerged. It said, instead, that the federal court in the Southern city of Curitiba, which sentenced da Silva twice for corruption and money laundering, didn’t have jurisdiction to put the leftist leader on trial.