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Brazil’s Bolsonaro names judge who jailed his rival as justice minister

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RIO DE JANEIRO, (Reuters) - Brazilian far-right President-elect Jair Bolsonaro has convinced crusading anti-graft Judge Sergio Moro to become his justice minister, the two said yesterday, delighting supporters and enraging critics by hiring the jurist who jailed Bolsonaro’s chief political rival.

Moro oversaw the “Operation Car Wash” probe that sent former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to prison, blocking him from running against Bolsonaro.

A telegenic 46-year-old who has previously denied any political ambitions, Moro flew to Bolsonaro’s beachside Rio de Janeiro home on Thursday, where the two met before announcing the decision.

“His anti-corruption and anti-organized crime agenda, as well as his respect for the laws and the constituti­on, will be our guide,” Bolsonaro tweeted.

The president-elect scored a clear political victory with the appointmen­t of Moro, who gained cult following in Brazil after he locked up a string of politician­s and businessme­n.

But his appointmen­t also gives ammunition to Bolsonaro’s opponents, who have long argued that the Car Wash probe was a politicize­d purge aimed at sidelining Lula and his leftist Workers Party (PT).

“Moro will be Bolsonaro’s minister after his decisive role in his election, by blocking Lula from running,” tweeted PT President Gleisi Hoffmann. “Fraud of the century!”

Moro’s decision to work with Bolsonaro brings risks. The president-elect has a history of making racist, misogynist and homophobic comments, as well as remarks dismissive of democratic institutio­ns, although he has pledged repeatedly in recent days to respect the constituti­on.

“The opportunit­y to implement a strong anti-corruption and anti-organized crime agenda, with respect for the constituti­on, the law and rights, led me to take this decision,” Moro said in a statement. He added that he would hand over the reins of the Car Wash investigat­ion to other judges.

As justice minister, Moro will have oversight of the federal police and federal public security, a crucial appointmen­t for Bolsonaro, who has pledged to aggressive­ly combat corruption and violent crime.

In a TV interview, Bolsonaro said Moro will have broad license to pick his own staff. Although public security is not one of Moro’s specialtie­s, his reliance on good advisers will allow him to make the right decisions, Bolsonaro added.

In 2016, Moro said he would never enter politics, keeping the focus on his graftfight­ing crusade in the courts. But the rise of Bolsonaro, a seven-term congressma­n who has cast himself as a political maverick untainted by graft allegation­s, appears to have changed the judge’s mind.

Some on Bolsonaro’s team would even like Moro to run for the presidency in 2022, according to a report by a Folha de S. Paulo columnist on the newspaper’s website on Thursday.

Moro, who was floated as a possible presidenti­al candidate in the run-up to this year’s election, has seen his profile rise quickly as his name became synonymous with probes targeting a corrupt political establishm­ent.

Early last year, Moro enjoyed the support of nearly two- thirds of Brazilians in opinion polls. That figure dropped sharply after he sentenced Lula, who is still remembered fondly for reducing inequality during his

2003-2011 presidency.

Bolsonaro is expected to announce a full cabinet this month, ahead of his Jan. 1 inaugurati­on. At his first formal news conference on Thursday, he gave fresh details of his agenda.

He left the door open to reverse a proposal to merge the environmen­tal and agricultur­al ministries after criticism from the current ministers and environmen­talists. Bolsonaro also said that a proposed deal between plane makers Boeing Co and Brazil’s Embraer that requires government approval is “going through,” without elaboratin­g.

Asked about the debt-ridden state-run oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA, he said the company, known as Petrobras, should seek partnershi­ps because it was not in a position to afford new investment­s on its own.

Bolsonaro also reaffirmed a proposal to move Brazil’s embassy in Israel to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv, following a similar move by U.S. President Donald Trump and prompting an enthusiast­ic response from Israeli President Benjamin Netanyahu.

“I praise my friend the incoming Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, for his intention to move Brazil’s embassy to Jerusalem,” Netanyahu said in a statement.

John Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser, said Bolsonaro and the U.S. president were “like-minded” individual­s.

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Sergio Moro

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