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Rallies held for, against Rousseff in Brazil

The supporters of Dilma Rousseff, who has been sacked as Brazil’s president, attend a protest after her removal from office by the Senate, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, August 31, 2016. (Photo by Reuters)

Widespread protests have been held in major Brazilian cities for and against sacked president Dilma Rousseff following a vote by the country’s Senate to permanently remove her from the presidency at the end of an impeachment trial.

On Wednesday, Rousseff’s supporters took to the streets in the cities of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo to show their anger at the Senate’s decision to oust the 68-year-old leftist politician.

Following Rousseff’s ouster, Michel Temer, her vice president-turned-opponent, who had taken over as interim president during the impeachment process, was sworn in as the Latin American country’s new president.

Holding banners and placards, the demonstrators in their hundreds chanted “Out with Temer,” and “Fight forever, Temer never.”

The supporters of Brazil’s Dilma Rousseff attend a protest after her removal from the presidency by the senate, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, August 31, 2016. (Photo by Reuters)

Earlier in the day, senators had voted by a majority of 61 to 20 to depose Rousseff, who is convicted of breaking fiscal rules in her management of the 2014 federal budget, a charge she had adamantly dismissed throughout the entire impeachment process.

“This government does not represent us,” said a protester in a pro-Rousseff rally.

“We are protesting against the coup and fighting for democracy,” said another protester.

The demonstrations in Sao Paulo turned violent, and riot police used tear gas and water cannons to disperse crowds of protesters.

Riot police fire tear gas during a protest for and against Dilma Rousseff in Sao Paulo, Brazil, August 31, 2016. (Photo by Reuters)

A demonstrator in the anti-Rousseff camp said, “After almost two years of movement out in the streets for the impeachment, they managed their victory, so today we are holding a small celebration of the definitive removal of Dilma Rousseff.”

Temer will now rule until the end of Rousseff’s presidential term and the next scheduled elections in late 2018.

In his swearing-in ceremony, he promised a “new era” of government for the crisis-hit country.

The Senate, the upper house of the Brazilian Congress, had voted to suspend Rousseff in May.

New Brazilian President Michel Temer (C) is seen after swearing in at a plenary of the Brazilian Senate in Brasilia, August 31, 2016. (Photo by AFP)

During a trial session on Monday, Rousseff denied the allegations against her and called the impeachment a coup d’état.

Under Brazil’s constitution, a sacked president loses political rights for eight years and should be banned from holding public office for eight years.

In an unexpected move, however, senators held another vote on Wednesday on whether to allow Rousseff to hold public office for eight years after a ruling by Chief Justice Ricardo Lewandowski, the magistrate overseeing her trial.

The majority of the senators voted against preventing the sacked president from holding public office for the next eight years.


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