Brazil’s next health minister says he will follow Bolsonaro plan

Editado por Ed Newman
2021-03-17 10:55:36

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Cardiologist Marcelo Queiroga, was named by Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro as the country's fourth health minister.  (Photo: Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters)

Brasilia, March 17 (RHC)-- Brazil’s next health minister – the country’s fourth since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic – has said he intends to continue the work of his predecessor in implementing far-right President Jair Bolsonaro’s policies.

Bolsonaro, who faces mounting pressure and public anger over his government’s handling of the crisis, announced earlier this week that cardiologist Marcelo Queiroga would take up the post of health minister.

Brazil has seen a surge in coronavirus cases and deaths in recent weeks.  The country has recorded over 11.5 million COVID-19 infections and more than 279,000 people have died to date, according to Johns Hopkins University data – the second highest totals in the world.

Queiroga will succeed Eduardo Pazuello, a general who had been criticised for lacking any public health experience and overseeing the crisis.

“Minister Pazuello has been working hard to improve health conditions in Brazil and I was called upon by President Bolsonaro to continue this work,” Queiroga said on Tuesday, as he arrived for his first meeting at the ministry.  He said the minister is there to implement health policies set by the president.

Queiroga has also said that lockdowns are not the way to get the surging pandemic under control, echoing Bolsonaro, who has eschewed public health restrictions despite calls from local and regional leaders for stricter measures.

The governor of Sao Paulo state, for instance, imposed a two-week lockdown this month in an effort to curb the potential spread of the virus, despite threats to cut federal funding.  The lockdowns have prompted some Brazilians to protest in recent days.

Meanwhile, Pazuello said on Monday that Brazil had ordered 100 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and 38 million from Johnson & Johnson, while it is negotiating for 13 million doses of Moderna Inc’s vaccine.

Bolsonaro also said this week that Brazil is “moving into a more aggressive phase in the fight against the virus.”  Geraldo Monteiro, a political scientist at Rio de Janeiro State University, said despite his recent comments, Bolsonaro’s convictions remain the same.

“It’s more of a strategic retreat due to by pressure from some of his political allies, notably in parliament, because the pandemic is out of control,” Monteiro told the AFP news agency.

That pressure has increased since a Brazilian Supreme Court judge last week annulled corruption convictions against leftist former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, opening the door for him to run in presidential elections next year.

Lula, who received a COVID-19 jab over the weekend, has slammed Bolsonaro for the surge in coronavirus-related deaths and infections.  “Do not follow that imbecile,” he told his supporters last week.

A recent poll showed that 61 percent of Brazilians disapprove of Bolsonaro’s handling of the crisis, AFP said.  “The hope of a change of course lies in electoral pressure, the only thing that has an effect on Bolsonaro,” read an editorial in daily newspaper O Estado de S Paulo on Tuesday.



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