Former Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was briefly detained for questioning on Friday in a federal investigation of a vast corruption scheme, fanning a political crisis that threatens to topple his successor, President Dilma Rousseff. Lula's questioning in police custody was the highest profile development in a two-year-old graft probe centered on the state oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA, which has rocked Brazil's political and business establishment and deepened the worst recession in decades in Latin America's biggest economy.
The investigation threatens to tarnish the legacy of Brazil's most powerful politician, whose humble roots and anti-poverty programs made him a folk hero, by putting a legal spotlight on how his left-leaning Workers' Party consolidated its position since rising to power 13 years ago.
Police picked up Lula at his home on the outskirts of Sao Paulo and released him after three hours of questioning. They said evidence suggested Lula had received illicit benefits from kickbacks at the oil company, Petrobras, in the form of payments and luxury real estate.
The evidence against the former president brought the graft investigation closer to his protegee Rousseff, who is fighting off impeachment for allegedly breaking budget rules, weakening her efforts to pull the economy out of a deepening downturn. Rousseff expressed her total disagreement with the police questioning of her mentor, saying in a statement it was "unnecessary" after his voluntary testimony. But she repeated her backing for institutions investigating corruption and said the probe must continue until those responsible were punished.
News of Lula's brief detention sparked a rally in Brazilian assets as traders bet that the political upheaval could empower a more market-friendly coalition. The real currency gained 2 percent against the U.S. dollar and the benchmark Bovespa index climbed nearly 4 percent. Shares of the state oil giant Petrobras surged 14 percent. "Ex-president Lula, besides being party leader, was the one ultimately responsible for the decision on who would be the directors at Petrobras and was one of the main beneficiaries of these crimes," said a police statement on his detention. "There is evidence that the crimes enriched him and financed electoral campaigns and the treasury of his political group."
Lula responded with indignation at an afternoon news conference, slamming investigators for "disrespecting democracy" and running what he called a media circus instead of a serious investigation.
He told supporters at Workers' Party headquarters that he had already answered the questions that police asked him on Friday and reiterated his assertion that he was not the owner of luxury real estate that investigators have suggested he received as bribes. Rousseff has also repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. Her labor minister, Miguel Rossetto, said in a public statement that the detention was "a clear attack on what Lula represents."
"This is not justice, this is violence," he said. Underscoring the deep political passions surrounding the former president, TV images from the street outside Lula's home on Friday showed his supporters clad in red shirts exchanging chants, insults and even blows with opponents.
Dozens of police arrived to break up the altercations, clearing the street by force. Pro-Lula protesters also gathered in a noisy protest outside federal police offices at a Sao Paulo airport where he was taken for questioning.
"VIOLENCE IN THE STREETS" As the founder and figurehead of his party, Lula's image has been central to huge street protests over the past year, both for and against Rousseff's impeachment, and powerful unions have marched repeatedly in his name.
A presidential aide who had not been authorised to speak with the press called the accusations against Lula a "turning point" in a long-simmering political crisis.
"This breaks with standard procedure. If they do not quickly present concrete proof against Lula, there is going to be violence in the streets. It could be a real war," said the aide. Lula, 70, became a model for a wave of leftist presidents in Latin America, coupling healthy economic growth with popular social programs that lifted more than 30 million out of poverty during his presidency from 2003 to 2010.
Yet investigators say much of the corruption at Petrobras happened during that period. On Friday, they called him and Rousseff the chief political beneficiaries of a scheme to fund Worker's Party campaigns with bribe money. Federal prosecutors who ordered Friday's raids said there was evidence that the former president personally received funds from the graft scheme at Petrobras through work on a luxury beachside penthouse and a country home.
Despite Lula's denials, prosecutors say doormen, OAS engineers and third-party contractors all said the condo in Guaruja, along with at least 1 million reais ($270,000) in improvements and furnishings, was intended for his family. Investigators also say Lula acquired two country estates in Atibaia worth 1.5 million reais, between 2010 and 2014, from businessman Jos? Carlos Bumlai and builders Odebrecht and OAS.
Odebrecht representatives said the company was collaborating with a search and seizure operation at its headquarters in Sao Paulo. OAS declined to comment. "The suspicion is that the improvements and the properties are bribes derived from the illegal gains made by OAS in the Petrobras graft scheme," the prosecutors' statement said.
Prosecutors are also investigating payments to Lula by companies involved in the Petrobras scandal that were treated officially as donations and fees for speaking appearances. Police said they carried out dozens of search and arrest warrants in the latest round of the investigation known as Operation Carwash, after the small-time money laundering investigation that spawned the probe. Some 200 police and 30 auditors from the federal tax office took part.
Brazilian media reported on Thursday that ruling party Senator Delcidio Amaral, a major legislative ally for Rousseff before he was arrested in November, allegedly tied the president and Lula to the scandal engulfing Petrobras in a 400-page plea bargain made with prosecutors. Separately, opponents are seeking to impeach Rousseff on the grounds that she deliberately broke budgetary laws to boost government spending as she ran for re-election in 2014.
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