Round The World
New Delhi, 4 November 2022
Lula Wins Brazil
GOOD FOR INDIA!
By Dr D.K. Giri
(Prof. International Relations,
JIMMC)
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, popularly
known as Lula, a 77-year old, Left-of-the Centre politician bounced back to be the
President for the third time in just-concluded elections in Brazil. He was
imprisoned for 18 months, three years ago on charges of corruption which were
eventually dropped. His election victory is hoped to bring stability and
vitality to the Brazilian democracy.
However, the elections were close,
bitterly fought and the margin of victory is wafer thin. Lula got 55.9 per cent
of popular votes as against 49.1 per cent secured by the incumbent Jair Bolsonaro.
The entire world was watching the Brazilian presidential elections, hoping for
a new voice of negotiation and accommodation to emerge in the present
polarising world. What would this victory mean for India, a partner of Brazil
in world politics especially in BRICS?
Brazil’s presidential elections drew
international attention for a variety of reasons. Brazil is a middle power in
the world, the biggest in the Latin America with largest population (215 million),
maximum surplus land in the world, plenty of fresh water reserve, and the
largest forest area. It has borders with ten countries without any territorial
disputes with any. It has had no war with any country in the last 150 years and
has been free from the worldwide scourge of terrorism. Admittedly, it has, like
any other country its own share of socio-economic problems. Lula, the
President-elect would find greater challenges to address than when he left the
office twelve years ago.
The electoral battle was marked by
two competing and contrasting ideologies. The incumbent President Bolsonaro was
an army captain, ‘trained to fight and kill’. He was accused of sexism, racism
and dictatorial tendencies. He was aggressive and abusive in his election
campaign. He called Lula a nine-finger thief; Lula had lost one of his fingers
while working on machines in his labourer days. Bolsonaro had offended an
indigenous Yanomani community branding them as cannibals. He had said, “I would
eat an Indian, no problem”. Consequently, a lot of Afro-Latin Americans voted
against him. More egregiously, Bolsonaro badly handled the pandemic which
caused the deaths of about 700,000 Brazilians. He had dismissed the pandemic as
a ‘little flue’.
In contrast, Lula had quite a poor
background in the North-East region of Brazil. He was a shoe-shine boy, an
office boy, lathe operator, electrician and a factory worker. He joined the
trade union to defend the rights of the workers, where he learnt the art of
bargaining and negotiations. He used those skills in his previous stints in the
office of President to pass several bills with the support of other parties in
the Congress. He had introduced many pro-poor welfare schemes, like the quite
popular Bolsa Familia programme, and had lifted about 30-milion people out of
crippling poverty. All in all, there was a straight fight between two
antagonistic ideologies, extreme right versus progressive left, corresponding
to ultra –nationalism, conservatism, neo-liberalism vs inclusive social
development anchored in social liberalism and progressivism.
A sidebar to the election is
replication of the last American presidential elections where Donald Trump
refused to concede defeat while his supporters had stormed the White House.
Bolsonaro is an ardent admirer of Donald Trump. He too did not accept defeat
immediately. His hardline supporters blocked the highways for 24 hours and were
demanding military intervention to let Bolsonaro continue in office. However,
because of heavy economic disruption and imminent law-and-order situation,
Bolsonaro’s advisors and allies were advising him to accept defeat. His
Communication Minister Fabio Faria told reporters that Bolsonaro would make a
statement soon. His Vice-President Hamilton Mourao and the Speaker of the Lower
House of the Congress were advising him to respect the election results. At the
time of writing, Bolsonaro was preparing to break his silence and recognise the
victory of Lula. His Chief of Staff Ciro Nogueira was in touch with Lula about
the process of transition of power.
The world community was welcoming
the election results and re-emergence of Lula in world politics. The Europeans
mainly the green parties and the climate activists were hailing Lula’s victory
as he would certainly arrest the deforestation and erosion in Amazon. On
economic front, Bolsonaro’s protectionism was a hurdle to opening of the trade.
The trade and business community was also looking towards better prospects. The
West is expecting Lula to lean towards Europe and America.
The pro-Western tilt of Lula is
predicated on the basis of the anti-China tirade by both Bolsonaro and Lula,
during the election campaign. Both of them attributed the de-industrialisation
of Brazil to Chinese policies towards Brazil. Lula said that China was not
occupying Latin America, China was actually occupying Brazil. Bolsonaro added
that China was not buying from Brazil but buying Brazil. At the same time, the
slowdown in China has hurt Brazil as both countries had the biggest trade
relations in Latin America. The Brazilian economic growth is expected to be 0.6
per cent next year. The commodity boom is no longer there.
As for India and Brazil relations,
Prime Minister Narendra Modi tried to befriend Bolsonaro. He had invited the
Brazilian President as the Chief Guest of the Republic Day parade in 2020, which
was a special honour. During that visit, 15 MoUs were signed on oil, natural
gas, trade, investment, health, medicines, science and technology etc. However,
Bolsonaro’s isolationist approach was a bottle-neck in building deeper and
wider partnership with Brazil.
Brazil is India’s largest trading
partner in Latin America. India’s export to Brazil in 21-22 was to the tune of
6.5 billion USD and imports during the same period were 5.7 billion USD. Indian
companies have invested in oil fields, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, aluminium
plants, auto parts and IT. Likewise, Brazil has invested in electrical motors,
auto parts and IT. Brazil and India have similar world views on South-South
cooperation, a multi-polar world and collaborating in WTO and UN etc. Lula took
special interest in India, sought to collaborate with India in BRICS. He
encouraged his officials and businessmen to visit India and explore contracts
and opportunities. Lula himself visited India even after his presidency.
The challenge, however, for both
countries would be to align their international policies especially their
reactions to the ongoing war in Ukraine. The democratic world is expecting the
middle-powers like India, South Africa and Brazil, all members of BRICS to
speak for territorial integrity of countries. India has so far restrained
herself in naming Russia as the aggressor and has abstained in UN resolutions
in condemning Russia. South Africa has done similar.
It will be in fitness of things
towards formulating a third way, different from two power blocs – US led NATO
and China-Russia axis - that Brazil, India and South Africa and other
like-minded countries take an international value-based approach to the world
issues. That will help restore and speak for a rule-based world order. India
should find a credible and formidable partner in Lula, ideological differences
notwithstanding. Will New Delhi approach Lula’s regime with this fresh perspective?---INFA
(Copyright, India News & Feature
Alliance)
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