Brazil court suspends Lower House Speaker Eduardo Cunha
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By News report
BBC
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Mr Cunha has been investigated as part of the Petrobras inquiry (AFP)
Brazil's top court has suspended
Lower House Speaker Eduardo Cunha from his mandate, following a request
by the country's attorney general, officials say.
He has been accused of trying to obstruct a corruption investigation against him and intimidating lawmakers.
Mr Cunha is an outspoken critic of President Dilma Rousseff and has led an impeachment drive against her.
Next week, Brazil's Senate is due to vote on whether to launch an impeachment trial against her.
If
a simple majority votes in favour, she will be suspended from office
for 180 days while Vice-President Michel Temer takes over as interim
president.
Under Brazil's constitution, Mr Cunha was the next in line for the
presidency after Mr Temer, who is facing impeachment proceedings on
charges similar to those facing President Rousseff.
Analysis by BBC South America correspondent Wyre Davies
The
dramatic suspension of Eduardo Cunha from the lower house of Congress
may come too late to save Dilma Rousseff but, be in no doubt, he played a
critical role in the process which now sees Brazil's first woman
president on the verge of suspension from office.
Dilma
Rousseff and her supporters in Congress say it was her government's
decision not to give in to the Speaker's demands, specifically over an
ethics committee investigation into Mr Cunha, that triggered his
subsequent move to begin the impeachment process against the president.
In
her wide-ranging BBC interview, while declaring her own innocence, Ms
Rousseff was scathing about the man who has emerged as her nemesis.
"The
one person responsible for… the impeachment request (against me) is
himself under charges. He's notorious, known to have foreign bank
accounts and is under charges of money laundering and corruption," she
said.
According to opinion polls, Eduardo Cunha is even more
unpopular that the beleaguered president after details of his Swiss bank
accounts, which he had earlier denied having, came to light.
Mr
Cunha, a committed evangelical Christian who often quotes the Bible in
his social media messages, protests his innocence and may find a way
back.
He is a talented and well-connected political operator but
his chances of perhaps becoming the next president of Brazil, by default
as Speaker of Congress, are now almost non-existent.
Ms Rousseff has accused Mr Temer and Mr Cunha, who
belong to the opposition PMDB party, of being the ringleaders of a
"coup attempt" against her.
Mr Cunha is suspected of obstructing
an investigation into allegations he took $5m (£3.2m) in bribes from
companies seeking to secure contracts with state-oil giant Petrobras,
which he denies.
Petrobras is at the centre of a massive kickbacks
scandal which has led to the arrest of dozens of lawmakers and top
businessmen.
Waldir Maranhao, who is also under investigation for
his alleged role in the Petrobras corruption scandal, is to become the
next Speaker of the House.
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