Thursday, 5 May 2016

Brazil suspends lower house speaker

A Brazilian Supreme Court judge has suspended Eduardo Cunha, the senior lawmaker at the centre of efforts to impeach President Dilma Rousseff, citing his attempt to obstruct a probe into his alleged corruption.

The speaker of Brazil's lower house of Congress is the architect of the impeachment drive, which is expected to see Rousseff forced to step aside from office on Wednesday.

Despite facing criminal charges including bribery and hiding money in Swiss bank accounts, Cunha has survived months of attempts by prosecutors and a congressional ethics committee to see him brought to justice.

But the man Brazilians refer to as a real-life Frank Underwood - the corrupt US politician in the hit Netflix series "House of Cards" - appeared finally to have been brought down by Justice Teori Zavaski.

The ruling reflected concerns on the Supreme Court that with Rousseff suspended and replaced by her vice president, Michel Temer, Cunha would have moved up to first on the presidential succession list.

Zavaski said in his ruling "there is not the least doubt that the suspect does not meet the minimum personal requirements for fully exercising the functions of speaker of the chamber of deputies at this time".

"That qualifies him even less so for substituting as the president of the republic," he said.

Prosecutors had long asked for Cunha to be brought to trial in the Supreme Court - which handles all high-ranking politicians - but the court was said to be wary of suspending Cunha while the impeachment battle was in full flow in the lower house.

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