How a far right assault on Brazil’s democracy failed

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The effort to overturn the election of the Brazilian president was thwarted but the attack has shaken an already divided country, reports Tom Phillips

When the Guardian’s Tom Phillips toured the presidential palace in Brasília on Monday, he witnessed utter devastation. He tells Michael Safi of multimillion-dollar works of art destroyed, a copy of the constitution defaced, furniture wrecked and human waste everywhere. But the pro-Jair Bolsonaro rioters who stormed Brazil’s democratic institutions on Sunday ultimately failed in their attempt to topple the new president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and hundreds have since been arrested.

However, troubling questions remain: how did the mob get into what should have been highly protected state buildings? How was the riot organised without being disrupted by the security forces? After being sworn in to office less than a fortnight ago, who can Lula trust?

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Author: AliensFaith
HighTech FinTech researcher, university lecturer & Scholar. He is studying his second doctoral degree at the Hague International University. Studying different fields of Sciences gave him a broad understanding of various aspects of life. His recent researches covered AI, Machine-learning & Automation concepts. The Information Technology Skills & Knowledge gave his company a higher position over other regional high-tech consultancy services. The other qualities and activities which can describe him are a Hobbyist Programmer, Achiever, Strategic Thinker, Futuristic person, and Frequent Traveler.

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