Thursday, September 11, 2025

Naked Nepali minister chased into river by furious protesters

Naked Nepali minister chased into river by furious protesters
/ Bishnu Prasad Paudel - Official FB page
By bno - Kolkata Office September 11, 2025

Nepal’s political crisis hit a jaw-dropping new low this week as Finance Minister Bishnu Prasad Paudel was stripped nearly naked and chased into a river by enraged demonstrators, Gulf News reports.

The shocking incident, caught on video, came just hours after protesters set fire to parts of the parliament building in a fiery show of rage.

Angry youths, many from the so-called “Gen Z” generation, are at the heart of the unrest, venting over soaring prices, record unemployment, and rampant government corruption. They’ve turned the streets into a battlefield, at least 30 have been killed but they are showing no signs of letting up.

Analysts say the river humiliation is more than a personal disaster for Paudel - it’s a blazing symbol of the public’s growing contempt for Nepal’s fractured and feuding political elite.

The footage shows the minister, clad only in underwear and wearing what appears to be a motorbike helmet, being pushed into the river while one protester follows him, occasionally administering blows to the head as hundreds scream from both banks.

The bizarre scene has gone viral, a vivid illustration of just how far the chasm has grown between Nepal’s rulers and its citizens and will no doubt provide food for thought for others around the world dealing with their own errant government officials.

PUTIN'S PUPPETS

US lifts sanctions on Belarusian Belavia airline

#UPDATE: US lifts sanctions on Belarusian Belavia airline
The United States has removed sanctions on Belarus’s national carrier Belavia, US Presidential Representative John Cole said at a meeting with President Alexander Lukashenko. / bne IntelliNews
By Leon Aris in Berlin September 11, 2025

The United States has lifted sanctions on Belarus’s state-owned airline Belavia, US Presidential Representative John Cole announced during a meeting with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, BelTA reported on September 11.

"I want to state quite officially that we have lifted sanctions on Belavia. It is official. The decision was made by [US] President Donald Trump, who said: 'Do it immediately,'" Cole said.

Cole added that the decision had been approved and coordinated by all relevant US agencies, including the State Department, the Department of Commerce and the Department of the Treasury.

Lukashenko has been flirting with the Trump administration for several months, hoping to improve his relations with the West in order to get some sanctions relief as well as some leverage in his relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Since aiding Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Belarus has also been put under a heavy sanctions regime and Minsk has become entirely dependent on Moscow.

It could be that the decision to lift sanctions on Belavia is a direct result of Minsk warning Warsaw of the imminent Russian drone incursion into Polish airspace September 10, causing international outrage.

General Wiesław Kukuła, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces, said the advance warning was “helpful for us” but somewhat “surprising,” given Belarus’ support for Russia in the war in Ukraine, and tensions along the border with Poland.

“The Belarusians warned us that drones were heading towards us through their airspace,” the general said, adding that Poland accepted the tip-off and reciprocated by sharing information about objects flying towards Belarus.

“It was surprising to me that Belarus, which is really trying to escalate the situation on our land border, decided to cooperate in this way,” he told TVN24.

Prior to the drone warning, In June there was another gesture. The high profile political prisoner Sergey Tikhanovsky (Siarhei Tsikhanouskiy), husband of Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya (Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya), was released from prison following a US-brokered pardon after envoy Keith Kellogg met with Lukashenko in Minsk. The release marked the dramatic thawing in US-Belarus relations.

The United States imposed sanctions on the Belarusian airline Belavia on April 8, 2022. Although Belavia was singled out for having “helped incite and organise illegal border crossings through Belarus to the EU”, the sanctions stopped short of a general flight ban to prevent the airline crossing EU territory, which had been suggested.

Washington had imposed restrictions on Belavia on April 8, 2022, banning flights to Belarus or Russia by US-owned, controlled or operated aircrafts. In June that year, the US Department of Commerce further tightened sanctions on the airline, citing violations of export controls.

The measures prohibited companies worldwide from servicing, repairing or otherwise using American parts or equipment to maintain Belavia’s fleet.

The European Union introduced its own sanctions against Belavia in December 2021, accusing the carrier of facilitating illegal migration by transporting citizens of the Middle East and North Africa. Belavia rejected the accusations, stating it had no role in such activities.

In May 2024, the Court of Justice of the European Union dismissed a lawsuit filed by Belavia, which sought to challenge the bloc’s restrictions.

"The decision was made by President Trump, who said: 'Do it immediately,'" Cole reiterated during his meeting with Lukashenko.

Trump and Lukoshenko's relationship has been warming. “It seems that months of cautious contact with Washington, measured concessions, and concerted messaging from Lukashenko eventually produced the desired result.”

When Donald Trump picked up the phone en route to his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on August 15, his brief call with Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko marked an unprecedented diplomatic moment. It was the first time in Lukashenko’s 31 years in power that a sitting US president had spoken to him—an event less significant to Trump’s agenda that day, but momentous in Minsk.

That Trump referred to Lukashenko as “highly respected President” on social media only added to the symbolism, given the West’s long-standing refusal to recognise him as the legitimate head of state following the violently disputed 2020 election. He also thanked Lukashenko for releasing 16 political prisoners—although he avoided using the word “political”—and said he hoped more would follow.

Lukashenko has offered to release 1,300 political prisoners, but only if they leave the country, as he seeks to improve ties with the Trump administration further, The Kyiv Independent reported on August 28.

The latest proposal comes after he released 14 political prisoners last month, including Sergey Tikhanovsky (Siarhei Tsikhanouskiy), the husband of Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya (Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya) who contested the 2020 presidential elections in his stead after he was arrested before the poll.Since the war in Ukraine broke out, instead of throwing US support behind Kyiv and offering it security guarantees, Trump has demanded the $350bn he claims the US has spent on the three year war in Ukraine, which some have labelled as reparations.

But others say that this dramatic volte-face is actually a clever change in US foreign policy. Trump is attempting a “reverse Nixon”. By cozying up to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is obviously very interested in doing deals with the US, he is attempting to “peel Russia off” from its “no limits” relationship with China.

#BREAKING: Belarus releases another 52 prisoners after talks with US



#BREAKING: Belarus releases another 52 prisoners after talks with US
Belarus has released another 52 prisoners following negotiations with the US in MInsk. / bne IntelliNews
By Ben Aris in Belrin September 11, 2025

Belarus has released another 52 prisoners following negotiations with the US , with President Alexander Lukashenko granting pardons on what state media described as humanitarian grounds, the BelTA news agency reported on September 11.

The prisoners have already left the country and are now in Lithuania, according to Belarusian reports, and include two German nationals and one Briton.

As bne IntelliNews reported, earlier in the day, the US lifted sanctions on the state-owned national airline Belavia in what appears to be a reward for Minsk’s early warning of a Russian drone incursion into Polish airspace on September 10.

BelTA said the group included 14 foreign nationals: two Germans, six Lithuanians, one French citizen, one Briton, two Latvians and two Poles.

Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda confirmed the releases in a statement on X. “The released people could now leave barbed wire, barred windows, and constant fear behind them,” he wrote.

Nausėda also thanked US President Donald Trump for his role in securing the outcome. “52 is a lot. A great many. Yet more than 1,000 political prisoners are still being held in Belarusian prisons, and we must not stop until they regain their freedom,” he added.

The release comes on the heels of the release of 16 prisoners, including Sergey Tikhanovsky (Siarhei Tsikhanouskiy), the husband of Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya (Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya) in June following a US-brokered pardon after envoy Keith Kellogg met with President Lukashenko in Minsk.

That deal led some analysts to ask if Lukashenko can capitalise on a thaw in relations with the US, which is clearly trying to split Lukashenko off from his dependence on Russian President Vladimir Putin.

It appears is this effort is going well. US President Donald Trump called Lukashenko from Air Force One on his way to meet Putin for the Alaska summit on August 15 can called him a “great president” in remarks to the onboard US press corps travelling with him. Subsequently, Lukashenko offered to release all 1,300 political prisoners, but only if they leave the country, as he seeks to improve ties with the Trump administration further.

The Viasna Human Rights Centre said that among those freed was former presidential candidate Nikolai Statkevich. There was no confirmation of the release of prominent opposition leader Maria Kolesnikova, a leading figure in the opposition movement and Tikhanovskaya’s campaign maanger during the disputed August 2020 president elections.

Trump was in direct contact with Lukashenko over the latest release, according to BelTA. The pair last month discussed further releases after the freeing Tikhanovsky. On September 11, lawyer John Coale, acting as Trump’s envoy, travelled to Minsk to deliver a personal letter signed “Donald”.

“If Donald insists that he’s ready to take all these released prisoners, God bless you, then let’s try to work out a global deal, as Mr Trump likes to say, a grand deal,” Lukashenko was quoted as saying. Coale added that Washington was seeking to reopen its embassy in Minsk, describing current ties with Belarus as “good, but not excellent”.

Lukashenko, who continues to back Russia’s invasion of Ukraine while suppressing opposition at home with brutal repressions, sought to cast the gesture as part of a broader peace effort. “Our main task is to support Trump and help him in his mission to establish peace,” he said, as quoted by Spiegel.

Sanctions on Belavia will be lifted, allowing it once again to purchase spare parts for its Boeing aircraft. However, an EU flight ban into European airspace appears to still be in effect.

The pardons come too late for the 36 year old Andrei Podnebenny who died in a Belarusian jail last week. Born in Russia, Podnebenny was a 16 year prison sentence for what government critics call politically motivated charges.

He was arrested in late 2021 during a sweeping crackdown on dissent after Lukashenko claimed victory in a disputed election the year before. A Belarusian court sentenced him in 2022 for running an “extremist” Telegram channel, vandalizing dozens of trolleybuses and setting fire to a prison authority’s car.

Podnebenny is thought to be the ninth political prisoner to have died in a Belarusian jail since 2020, according to Viasna, which had recognized him as a political prisoner.

EU diplomat and opposition veteran among 52 political prisoners freed by Belarus

Belarus on Thursday freed 52 political prisoners into neighbouring Lithuania following calls from US President Donald Trump for their release. Among those freed were an EU diplomat along with veteran dissident Mikola Statkevich, who was a 2010 presidential candidate.


Issued on: 11/09/2025 
By: FRANCE 24


Lithuanian citizen Elena Ramanauskiene leaves a bus in Lithuania at the border with Belarus after her release from prison on September 11, 2025. © Lithuania's Foreign Ministry via AFP

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko's government has freed 52 political prisoners, including an EU diplomat and veteran opposition figure, neighbouring Lithuania said on Thursday, crediting US efforts to secure their release.

Tens of thousands of Belarusians took to the streets in 2020 to protest against what they called a sham presidential election in which Lukashenko secured himself a sixth term.

Many were detained during a brutal crackdown and later prosecuted on what rights group slam as politically motivated charges.

Lithuania's President Gitanas Nauseda wrote on X that "52 prisoners safely crossed the Lithuanian border from Belarus today", saying he was "deeply grateful" for President Donald Trump's involvement.


According to the Belarusian state news agency Belta, 14 people with foreign citizenship were among those freed: six Lithuanians, two Latvians, two Poles, two Germans, one French national and a British citizen.

Trump has pushed Belarus to free political prisoners in contacts with Lukashenko, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

An EU staff member named Mikalai Khilo was among those released, EU president Ursula von der Leyen said on Thursday, thanking Trump for his support.

"The release of political prisoners in Belarus is welcome news. I'm glad our colleague Mikalai Khilo is among those freed. Mikalai safely arrived at our representation in Vilnius," von der Leyen said.

Also released was Mikola Statkevich, 69, a veteran dissident and a 2010 presidential candidate, who spent five years in jail, according to rights group Vyasna.
Belarus' opposition figures Mikola Statkevich and Vladimir Neklyayev meet with people in central Minsk on September 10, 2015. © Sergei Gapon, AFP

State media and rights groups reported that a published video of a man they said resembled Statkevich was sitting at the border, refusing to cross into Lithuania.

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty journalist Ihar Losik, 33, has also been freed after spending five years in jail, the US outlet said.
1,000 still in jail

Nauseda urged further prisoner releases, saying: "More than 1,000 political prisoners still remain in Belarusian prisons and we cannot stop until they see freedom!"

The latest release came as a US official on a visit to Belarus on Thursday said Washington had lifted sanctions on the country's state airline, Belavia.

"As of right now, we're lifting sanctions on Belavia," said Trump's deputy special envoy John Coale in a meeting with Lukashenko that was broadcast on state television.

"Right now, they're lifted ... the president [Trump] three times said, 'Do it', so we didn't have to go through all the bureaucratic stuff. So it's done by the State Department, Treasury and Commerce."

At a news conference, Nauseda said that among those released were "opposition figures, journalists and participants in protests".

He did not disclose the identity of those freed, with the exception of Lithuanian national Elena Ramanauskiene, who was jailed last year on espionage charges.

Fourteen political prisoners were released from prison in Belarus in June, including Sergei Tikhanovsky, the husband of the exiled opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya.

Read more




Albania names world’s first AI-generated minister as Rama unveils fourth-term cabinet

Albania names world’s first AI-generated minister as Rama unveils fourth-term cabinet
Albania's long-serving Prime Minister Edi Rama names his new cabinet. / Edi Rama via Facebook
By bne IntelliNews September 11, 2025

Albania on September 11 became the first country to appoint a government minister created entirely by artificial intelligence, as Prime Minister Edi Rama introduced a sweeping cabinet reshuffle and set out ambitious plans to steer the Balkan country toward European Union membership by 2030.

The virtual minister, named Diella — meaning “sunbeam” in Albanian — will oversee all public procurement, a sector seen as vulnerable to corruption. 

Rama, who secured a historic fourth term in May, described Diella as a “servant of public procurement” designed to make the tendering process fully transparent and “100% incorruptible”, reported Albanian broadcaster Top-channel. 

“Decisions on tenders will be taken outside the ministries and passed into the hands of Diella,” Rama told delegates at a Socialist Party assembly in Tirana. “This is not science fiction, but the duty of Diella.”

Diella is not a minister for artificial intelligence, but a digital entity built on AI systems and presented to citizens as an avatar. She already powers the government’s e-Albania online services platform and will be able to “employ talent from all over the world,” Rama said.

Public procurement has been a persistent weak spot for Albania, with the European Union repeatedly flagging graft concerns in annual rule-of-law assessments. Rama said the gradual transfer of procurement decisions to Diella would eliminate opportunities for bribery and ensure that “every public fund that goes through the tender procedure is 100% legible”. 

The announcement follows months of speculation after Rama mused in the summer about appointing a digital minister, and even a future AI prime minister. However, few expected the proposal to materialise so quickly.

Cabinet overhaul

After its fourth consecutive general election win earlier this year, Rama’s Socialist Party assembly also endorsed a wide-ranging reshuffle aimed at refreshing the government’s ranks for the country’s next phase of EU accession talks, as outlined in a speech delivered by Rama on September 11.

Deputy Prime Minister Belinda Balluku retained her role and will continue as minister of infrastructure and energy, the prime minister announced according to a Socialist Party statement.

Among the significant changes, Albana Koçiu became the first woman to lead the Ministry of Interior, replacing Ervin Hoxha.

Former parliament speaker Elisa Spiropali was named minister for Europe and foreign affairs, tasked with driving an intensive “diplomatic offensive” to win EU support.

Rama outlined his goal of concluding EU accession negotiations within 27 months and securing ratification by all 27 member states before the end of his mandate. “Our national mission of full integration with Europe has never been clearer,” he said.

Radiologist Evis Sala, who built an international career at leading hospitals from New York to Rome, will return to Albania to serve as minister of health and social welfare.

Other appointments include Besfort Lamallari as Justice Minister, Andis Salla as Agriculture Minister, and Sofjan Jaupaj as Environment Minister. Long-serving education chief Mirela Kumbaro will now head the Education Ministry after leading the environment portfolio.

The prime minister also addressed the ongoing leadership vacuum in Tirana, where the elected mayor, Erion Veliaj, has been detained for seven months pending trial. Rama urged the municipal council to trigger new elections, warning that Albania’s capital “cannot rise and fall endlessly like a headless body”.






UK PM Starmer sacks ambassador to the US over links to Epstein


Issued on: 11/09/2025 - FRANCE24

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Thursday fired the country's ambassador to the United States, Peter Mandelson, over his links to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The moves comes in the wake of the publication this week of emails Mandelson sent to Epstein in the 2000s, in which he gave his support to the disgraced financier even when he was facing jail for sex offenses. FRANCE 24's Bénédicte Paviot reports from London.



UK fires ambassador to US Peter ‘Prince of Darkness’ Mandelson over Epstein links


Dubbed the "Prince of Darkness" during his years as a media spin doctor, Peter Mandelson was appointed UK ambassador to the US in February. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Thursday fired Mandelson as UK ambassador to the US due to "new information" over his links to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.



Issued on: 11/09/2025 
By: FRANCE 24

Peter Mandelson was among a number of high-profile figures on the defensive over his association with with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. © Carl Court, AFP (Pool)



UK leader Keir Starmer sacked his ambassador in Washington Peter Mandelson on Thursday following "reprehensible" fresh revelations about the diplomat's friendship with sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Dubbed the "Prince of Darkness" during his years as a media spin doctor, Mandelson was twice forced to resign from Tony Blair's Labour government in the late 1990s and early 2000s over allegations of misconduct.

His dismissal as US envoy causes a political and diplomatic headache for the British prime minister as he prepares for next week's visit of US President Donald Trump, who is himself facing questions over his ties to Epstein.

It is the second high-profile departure from the UK government in the past week, after Starmer's former deputy Angela Rayner resigned last Friday for underpaying a property tax.

Starmer, meanwhile, is attempting to reboot his increasingly unpopular government.

Read moreUK's Starmer overhauls his cabinet after deputy PM resigns amid tax scandal

The prime minister asked top diplomat Yvette Cooper to withdraw Mandelson after emails he wrote to Epstein after he was convicted came to light, her office said.

"The emails show that the depth and extent of Peter Mandelson's relationship with Jeffrey Epstein is materially different from that known at the time of his appointment," it said.

"In particular Peter Mandelson's suggestion that Jeffrey Epstein's first conviction was wrongful and should be challenged is new information.

"In light of that, and mindful of the victims of Epstein's crimes he has been withdrawn as ambassador with immediate effect."

'Fight for release'

The sacking followed The Sun newspaper and Bloomberg reporting that Mandelson sent supportive messages to Epstein while the financier was being investigated in the United States for sexual offences in 2008.

The Labour party grandee sent emails telling Epstein he was following closely and "here whenever you need".

Mandelson also reportedly told Epstein to "fight for early release" shortly before he received an 18-month sentence for admitting procuring a child for prostitution.

"I think the world of you," Mandelson, a former Labour minister and ex-European trade commissioner, wrote the day before Epstein began his sentence.

A spokesman for Starmer said it was "self-evident" the prime minister "found the content of these emails reprehensible".

He denied claims that Starmer had shown poor judgement by appointing Mandelson less than a year ago when it had been publicly known that he had stayed friends with Epstein after his conviction.

"The Prime Minister has taken prompt and decisive action," the spokesman insisted.

Following the newspaper reports, the 71-year-old Mandelson told the BBC that he "relied on assurances of (Epstein's) innocence that turned out later to be horrendously false".
'Best pal'

"His lawyers claimed that it was a shake down of him, a criminal conspiracy. I foolishly relied on their word which I regret to this day," he added.

His position appeared increasingly precarious after one government minister said he was "completely disgusted" by the messages while another said the emails were "really disturbing and sickening".

At least three Labour MPs had publicly urged Starmer to fire Mandelson.

The smooth-talking political veteran had only started in the key diplomatic post earlier this year, tasked with building a close relationship with Trump.

The prime minister said as recently as Wednesday he had confidence in Mandelson, insisting that "due process was followed" ahead of the appointment.

Starmer's initial backing came after it was revealed that Mandelson called Epstein his "best pal" and an "intelligent, sharp-witted man" in a 2003 letter.

The letter was one of many included in a book compiled to mark the now notorious financier's 50th birthday. The contents were published by a US congressional panel investigating Epstein's sex crimes case.

Mandelson told The Sun he regretted "very deeply" associating with Epstein "for far longer than I should have done".

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Brazil's Supreme Court convicts Bolsonaro of coup plot

Brazil's Supreme Court convicts Bolsonaro of coup plot
The final vote rests with Justice Cristiano Zanin, who will announce the trial's outcome. Sentencing is expected on September 12, with Bolsonaro potentially facing more than 40 years in prison. / bne IntelliNews
By bne IntelliNews September 11, 2025

Brazil's Supreme Court has convicted former president Jair Bolsonaro of orchestrating a coup plot following his electoral defeat in 2022, in an unprecedented case against a former Brazilian head of state.

A panel of five Supreme Court justices reached the required majority on September 11 when Justice Cármen Lúcia cast the decisive third vote to convict the 70-year-old right-wing populist. The court found Bolsonaro guilty on all five charges: taking part in an armed criminal organisation, attempting to violently abolish Brazil's democratic order, plotting a coup d'état, and damaging government property and protected cultural assets.

Justice Lúcia described the proceedings as a "meeting between Brazil and its past, its present, and its future," referencing the country's history of democratic upheaval. She stated there was "conclusive evidence" that Bolsonaro led efforts "with the purpose of eroding democracy and institutions."

The conviction stems from events surrounding the 2022 presidential election, when Bolsonaro lost to left-wing candidate Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Prosecutors alleged that the coup plot began in 2021 with systematic attempts to undermine public confidence in Brazil's electoral system.

The scheme culminated on January 8, 2023, when thousands of Bolsonaro supporters stormed government buildings in the capital Brasília, just days after Lula's inauguration. The scenes echoed the storming of the US Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump, a close ideological ally, in January 2021. Demonstrators invaded and vandalised the headquarters of all three branches of government in what prosecutors described as an attempt to incite military intervention against the newly installed president.

According to Estadao, Justice Alexandre de Moraes, the case's rapporteur and a long-time foe of the embattled leader, presented video evidence during the proceedings, including footage of Bolsonaro's inflammatory speech on September 7, 2022, when the former president made threats against Supreme Court justices. Moraes challenged claims by dissenting Justice Luiz Fux that the January 8 events were merely the result of a "disorderly mob."

"I ask: would any of us here allow and affirm that this is freedom of expression, and not a crime, if a mayor, in a small town, inflamed the people against the district judge?" Moraes questioned after showing Bolsonaro's speech.

Only Justice Fux dissented from the majority verdict, acquitting Bolsonaro of all charges after a lengthy 13-hour presentation that criticised both the prosecution's case and the court's jurisdiction.

The final vote rests with Justice Cristiano Zanin, who will announce the trial's outcome. Sentencing is expected on September 12, with Bolsonaro potentially facing more than 40 years in prison.

Bolsonaro, currently under house arrest after being deemed a flight risk, remains a polarising but significant political figure in Brazil. Tens of thousands of his supporters rallied across the country on September 7 in shows of solidarity.

The case has sparked international tensions, particularly with the United States. President Trump has denounced the proceedings as a "witch hunt" and imposed 50% tariffs on various Brazilian goods in response. The Trump administration has also slapped sanctions on Justice Moraes for alleged "serious human rights violations" and announced visa restrictions against court officials.

Lula has condemned Trump's interference as "unacceptable" and an assault on Brazil's sovereignty, accusing the US of having "helped stage a coup."

The conviction represents a watershed moment in Brazilian politics and jurisprudence, as the country grapples with the aftermath of its most serious institutional crisis since the return of democracy in the 1980s.


Brazil's Bolsonaro given 27-year term for coup plotting



Brasília (AFP) – Brazil's Supreme Court on Thursday sentenced firebrand ex-president Jair Bolsonaro to 27 years in prison for coup plotting at the end of a landmark trial that divided the nation and drew US fury.


Issued on: 11/09/2025 - RFI

The criminal conviction of former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro came after a nail-biting trial that divided the country © Sergio Lima / AFP


The sentence could see the 70-year-old far-right leader spend the rest of his days in jail.

Judges voted 4-1 to convict Bolsonaro of plotting to overthrow Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva following his October 2022 election defeat by the left-winger.

He can appeal the verdict.

Washington was quick to respond to the conviction of the man dubbed "the Trump of the tropics."

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the United States "will respond accordingly" to what he called a politically motivated "witch hunt."

Trump, who had levied steep tariffs on Brazil as punishment over Bolsonaro's prosecution, labeled the verdict "very surprising."

"That's very much like they tried to do with me, but they didn't get away with it at all," he told reporters, calling Bolsonaro "a good man."

While the Supreme Court had already garnered the simple majority of three votes needed for his conviction at the fourth vote, it only become final after the last of the five judges issued his decision.

"An armed criminal organization was formed by the defendants, who must be convicted based on the factual circumstances I consider proven," said the fifth judge, Cristiano Zanin, Lula's former lawyer.
Brazilians celebrate the Supreme Court decision against former president Jair Bolsonaro © EVARISTO SA / AFP


Bolsonaro's seven co-accused, including former ministers and military chiefs, were also convicted.

Bolsonaro, a former army captain, who served a single term from 2019 to 2022, claims he is the victim of political persecution.


'Political'



Bolsonaro's conviction came after one of the biggest, most divisive trials in Brazil's recent history, which ended with a nail-biting vote that stretched over four days.

Bolsonaro himself did not attend the verdict hearings in the capital Brasilia, instead following the proceedings from his residence, where he is under house arrest.

Across the nation, Brazilians were glued to the proceedings on TV and social media.

In one Brasilia bar, patrons watching the trial on a giant screen burst into applause after he was convicted.

"After so much waiting, this despicable individual is being sent to jail," translator Virgilio Soares, 46, said.

But Germano Cavalcante, a 60-year-old civil engineer, called the trial "unfair."

Apart from heading a "criminal organization," Bolsonaro was charged with knowing of a plan to assassinate Lula, his vice president Geraldo Alckmin and Supreme Court Justice Alexandre Moraes.

He was also convicted of inciting the violent 2023 storming of the Supreme Court, presidential palace and Congress in Brasilia by hundreds of his supporters, a week after Lula was inaugurated as his successor.


A country divided


Portraits of former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro and current President Luis Ignacio Lula da Silva in the presidential palace in Brasilia © Pablo PORCIUNCULA / AFP

The trial drove a deep wedge through Brazilian society, between those primarily on the left who saw it as a vital test of the country's democracy, from those mainly on the right who viewed it as a political show trial.

Fearing his conviction, the ex-president's allies have been pushing Congress to pass an amnesty law to save him from prison.

The case has led to an unprecedented crisis in relations between the United States and longtime ally Brazil.

Besides the tariffs punishment, Washington has also sanctioned Moraes and other Supreme Court judges.

© 2025 AFP

In divided Brasilia, some celebrate Bolsonaro conviction, others fume

Brasília (AFP) – Patrons of a bar in Brasilia cheered and applauded Thursday as ex-president Jair Bolsonaro's guilty verdict appeared on a giant screen in scenes reminiscent of a football match.


Issued on: 12/09/2025 -  RFI

People celebrate the Brazil's Supreme Court decision on former President Jair Bolsonaro's trial in Brasilia © EVARISTO SA / AFP

"Bolsonaro to jail!" shouted customers of Pardim, well-known as a gathering spot for leftists in a residential neighborhood of the capital of deeply politically divided Brazil.

"I burst into tears. This is a very important moment for which we've been waiting a long time," Sofia Araujo, a 20-year-old student, told AFP on the bar's terrace.

"I am very happy. Today we can celebrate because justice has been served," she said.

Araujo told AFP she had also gone to Pardim in October 2022 to celebrate the election victory of leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, from whom Bolsonaro was found guilty Thursday of trying to claw back power through force.

Bolsonaro was put on trial for steering a "criminal organization" that sought to keep him in office, including plotting to assassinate Lula and others.

He is now awaiting sentencing.

Bar owner Jarbas Campos Pardim said he bought 80 cases of beer and fired up the barbecue for Thursday's hearing, during which the final two of five judges voted to convict the far-right former army captain.

The final verdict was 4-1.

"Today is conviction day, so it's a day of celebration," said Pardim, 47.


'Rot in jail'


Right-wing figures, meanwhile, expressed their outrage on social media platforms like X, where slogans such as "They want to kill Bolsonaro" and "Supreme persecution," multiplied © EVARISTO SA / AFP


Nearby, the street outside the former president's Brasilia home where he is under house arrest, was deserted except for a handful of supporters erecting a banner ahead of a planned vigil later Thursday.

The banner read: "Bolsonaro come back. Honk your horns," in a message to passers-by.

Right-wing figures, meanwhile, expressed their outrage on social media platforms like X, where slogans such as "They want to kill Bolsonaro" and "Supreme persecution," multiplied.

At Pardim, the mood was drastically different. Joao Marcelo Lopes Soares arrived early so he wouldn't miss a moment of Thursday's live broadcast.

"This September 11, 2025, is a historic day, a turning point in the fight against fascism," said the 25-year-old, sporting the red-and-black jersey of Flamengo, Brazil's most popular football club.

"Despite strong international pressure, especially from (US President Donald) Trump, I believe there's justice in Brazil; we are a serious country," Soares opined.

Trump has imposed a tariff of 50 percent on some Brazilian exports as punishment for what he has called the "witch hunt" against his far-right ally, and his administration has sanctioned one of the five Supreme Court judges in the case, Alexandre de Moraes.

Pardim patron Renato Alexandre Xavier, 53, prepared a parody version of Brazil's national anthem for the occasion.

"Pariah turned criminal, jail is your destiny," echoed one of the verses, which Xavier sang loudly, and proudly, in the bar.

"Hopefully he'll rot in jail, though he's already a rotten person," Virgilio Soares, a 46-year-old sign language translator said of Bolsonaro's fate.

© 2025 AFP

Brazil's Bolsonaro: US-backed firebrand facing future behind bars

Brasília (AFP) – As a military man Brazil's ex-president Jair Bolsonaro had a reputation for disobeying orders. As head of state from 2019 to 2022, he thumbed his nose at institutions.

12/09/2025 - RFI

Brazil's ex-president Jair Bolsonaro is on trial over attempted coup charges
 © Mateus Bonomi / AFP

Now he faces nearly three decades in prison for what prosecutors described as his most egregious act of defiance yet: plotting to cling on to power after losing elections to leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

The former army captain, who has the political backing of US President Donald Trump, was convicted Thursday of having led a criminal organization that aimed to prevent Lula taking office in early 2023.

The plot envisaged the assassination of Lula, his vice president Geraldo Alckmin, and Alexandre de Moraes -- one of the five Supreme Court judges in his trial.

Moraes and three other judges voted over several days to convict him for a final verdict of 4-1, then pronounced a sentence of 27 years and three months.

Bolsonaro, 70, who has repeatedly voiced nostalgia for Brazil's 1964-1985 dictatorship, protests his innocence and claims to be the victim of political persecution.


Bibles, bullets and beef


Brazilian former president Jair Bolsonaro enjoys the support of the powerful 'Bibles, bullets and beef 'coalition -- Evangelical Christians, security hardliners and the agribusiness industry © Douglas Magno / AFP/File


Bolsonaro enjoys the support of Brazil's powerful "Bibles, bullets and beef" coalition -- Evangelical Christians, security hardliners and the agribusiness industry.

He shot to prominence after the 2016 impeachment of former president Dilma Rousseff, with diatribes about corruption, violence, economic mismanagement and Brazil's "rotten" left.

On the campaign trail in 2018, he survived a knife attack that left him with severe abdominal wounds that continue to plague him to this day.

Bolsonaro's survival fueled followers' belief in their "Messiah" -- his middle name in Portuguese. Some have likened the attack to the 2024 attempt on Trump's life.

Nicknamed the "Trump of the Tropics," Bolsonaro's presidency was marked by Covid-19 denialism and rampant Amazon deforestation but also some early economic successes.

The pandemic, which Bolsonaro dismissed as a "little flu," claimed more than 700,000 lives in Brazil, second only to the United States.

Smarting from his failure to win a second presidential term, he left Brazil for Florida two days before the end of his mandate, snubbing Lula's inauguration.

A week later, on January 8, 2023, rampaging Bolsonaro supporters calling for the army to oust Lula stormed the presidential palace, Congress and Supreme Court.

Prosecutors accuse Bolsonaro, under house arrest since last month, of having incited the violence.

- History of controversy -

Former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro risks 40 years in prison if convicted of plotting to prevent his elected successor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva taking power © Evaristo SA / AFP

Born in 1955 to a Catholic family with Italian roots, Bolsonaro served in the army before launching his political career in the late 1980s as a Rio de Janeiro city councilor.

In 1991, he was elected to Congress.

He has a long history of homophobic, misogynistic and racist comments delivered in a belligerent, everyman style which endeared him to many.

In 2011, he told Playboy magazine he would rather his sons be killed in an accident than come out as gay.

Three years later, he said a left-wing lawmaker was "not worth raping" because she was "too ugly."

The fact that one of his children is a daughter, Bolsonaro has said, was the result of a moment of "weakness" on his part.

His third wife, Michelle, is 27 years his junior.

Bolsonaro's son Eduardo moved to the United States in February, where he successfully lobbied the Trump administration to impose sanctions on Moraes.

Trump also imposed a 50 percent tariff on a range of Brazilian imports.

Before the trial, Bolsonaro had hoped to overturn a ruling that barred him from holding public office until 2030 for spreading misinformation about Brazil's electoral system.

But his guilty verdict on five coup-related charges will likely scupper his hopes for a Trump-style return to the highest office after an election loss and criminal conviction.

He can still appeal.

© 2025 AFP

Brazil’s Moraes demands Bolsonaro conviction in first Supreme Court vote


“This is no bar talk. This is the president, on September 7, Brazil’s Independence Day, inciting thousands of people against the Supreme Court, against the Judiciary, and against a court authority,” Justice de Moraes stated. / agencia brasil
By bnl Sao Paulo bureau September 9, 2025

Brazil’s Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes has called for former president Jair Bolsonaro's conviction on five criminal charges, including attempted coup d'état, during the first day of deliberations in Brazil's historic coup trial, requesting sentences ranging from 12 to 43 years.

In a five-hour presentation on September 9, Moraes detailed evidence supporting charges of attempted violent abolition of the state, coup d'état, criminal organisation membership, and property damage, warning that "Brazil almost reverted to a dictatorship due to a criminal organisation led by Jair Messias Bolsonaro, who doesn't know how to lose elections."

Moraes argued Bolsonaro led a hierarchical group with divided tasks aimed at restricting judicial actions and circumventing checks and balances to perpetuate his power illegally, overturning the results of the 2022 general election.

“The leader of the criminal group makes it clear here – aloud, publicly, to the whole of society – that he would never accept a democratic defeat in the elections, that he would never accept or comply with the will of the people,” Moraes said, as quoted by Agencia Brasil.

The judge stated the coup plot began forming in July 2021 through speeches delegitimising the electoral system, violent acts, and threats against authorities.

The justice said that assassination plans targeting then-president-elect Lula, vice president-elect Geraldo Alckmin, and Moraes himself were "fully proven in the case files; there is an excess of evidence," noting printed reports appeared twice in presidential palaces where Bolsonaro was present.

Moraes described the January 8, 2023 storming of government buildings in Brasília as "the criminal organisation's final attempt to carry out what Bolsonaro proclaimed in 2021" when he warned the Armed Forces "never failed to respond to the call of the Brazilian people."

Bolsonaro, under house arrest, followed proceedings from home alongside seven co-defendants, six of whom are military personnel.

The far-right leader, an ideological ally of US President Donald Trump, denies having attempted a coup but acknowledged convening the Armed Forces leadership to "discuss exceptional measures" after the electoral defeat.

The United States last month imposed sweeping 50% tariffs, some of the steepest levies imposed by Washington, on Brazilian exports over what Trump characterised as a "witch hunt" against Bolsonaro. It has also hit Moraes with targeted sanctions under the controversial Magnitsky Act.

Unlike most supreme courts globally, Brazil's justices deliberate publicly, allowing live observation of verdict construction.

Moraes voted first as presiding judge, with four colleagues from the First Chamber expected to announce votes in the coming days. Three votes suffice for conviction or acquittal.

More than 1,000 citizens will attend the remaining sessions through to September 12’s expected verdict.

The outspoken judge has become Bolsonarism's primary foe since 2019, handling most cases involving the former president's family and political movement whilst accumulating power with Supreme Court majority support, including last year's controversial shutdown order targeting Elon Musk's X social network.