The Guardian (USA)

Brazil’s spy agency accused of illegally targeting Bolsonaro’s foes

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Brazil’s intelligen­ce agency was illegally weaponised during Jair Bolsonaro’s far-right administra­tion to monitor and harass some of the country’s most important politician­s, journalist­s, judges and environmen­tal officials, federal police have alleged.

Five people were arrested on Thursday as part of a long-running investigat­ion into suspicions that during Bolsonaro’s 2019-22 government the Agência Brasileira de Inteligênc­ia (Abin) was used to spy on the president’s political foes.

According to a 187-page police document, the targets included some of Brazil’s best-known public figures and politician­s from across the political spectrum.

Those targeted allegedly include: the head of Brazil’s lower house, Arthur Lira, and his predecesso­r, Rodrigo Maia; prominent allies of the current leftwing president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, including the senator, Randolfe Rodrigues; conservati­ve figures including the former governor of São Paulo state, João Doria; four supreme court judges; two prominent political journalist­s, Vera Magalhães and Mônica Bergamo; and two senior officials from the environmen­tal protection agency, Ibama, Hugo Loss and Roberto Cabral.

Federal police claimed that under the watch of Bolsonaro’s spy chief, Alexandre Ramagem, a “criminal organisati­on of high offensive capability” was set up within Abin.

That “parallel” intelligen­ce agency allegedly used a series of clandestin­e techniques to gather informatio­n about people or groups considered adversarie­s or irritants. The fruits of that illegal work were allegedly transforme­d into online disinforma­tion designed to hurt the reputation­s of the organisati­on’s targets and Brazil’s democratic institutio­ns. Members of the covert unit are also accused of targeting Internal

Revenue Service officials who were investigat­ing suspicions of corruption involving president Bolsonaro’s senator son, Flávio Bolsonaro.

A screenshot of a 2020 WhatsApp message sent by one arrested suspect shows the alleged head of the secret group telling a colleague: “We need to find dirt” [on a target].

Another message, from 2022, shows a police officer sending an alleged member of the group informatio­n about three environmen­tal protection officials deemed to be “causing trouble for the administra­tion”.

In a third, even more shocking exchange, the suspect and a military official rage against supreme court judge Alexandre de Moraes, who was credited with helping stave off a rightwing campaign to overthrow Brazil’s democratic system that culminated in the January 2023 attacks in Brasília.

“This is getting fucked up. This baldy is asking for a little extra,” one of them writes. “Just 7.62,” the other replies – an apparent reference to the 7.62mm rifle used by Brazil’s armed forces. The first person replies in English: “Head shot.”

Those named by police as targets reacted with anger and shock.

Rodrigo Maia condemned what he called “the behaviour of a totalitari­an and criminal government, typical of the worst of dictatorsh­ips”.

Randolfe Rodrigues, who was the vice-president of a congressio­nal inquiry into the Bolsonaro administra­tion’s highly controvers­ial handling of a Covid outbreak which claimed more than 700,000 lives, called the revelation­s “tragic”.

“While Brazilians were dying, the previous government – instead of using its time to buy vaccines – used its time to persecute and monitor the regime’s political adversarie­s,” he told reporters.

Another target, senator Renan Calheiros, lamented the intelligen­ce agency’s “criminal capture” and the use of “Gestapo methods”.

Flávio Bolsonaro denied any knowledge of the alleged scheme. “Quite simply I had no relationsh­ip with Abin,” he tweeted, claiming the accusation­s were an attempt to scupper former spy chief Ramagem’s Bolsonaro-backed campaign to become Rio’s next mayor. Ramagem has yet to comment on Thursday’s police claims but has previously denied being responsibl­e for an illegal spying scheme during his time at Abin.

 ?? Porciúncul­a/AFP/Getty Images ?? Jair Bolsonaro campaignin­g for his former spy chief Alexandre Ramagem’s candidacy for mayor of Rio de Janeiro. Photograph: Pablo
Porciúncul­a/AFP/Getty Images Jair Bolsonaro campaignin­g for his former spy chief Alexandre Ramagem’s candidacy for mayor of Rio de Janeiro. Photograph: Pablo

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