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SAO PAULO/BRASILIA:Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro met on Thursday with allied truckers leading pro-government protests on highways across the country, as police cleared blockades that threatened key grain and beef export routes.
Stirred up by the far-right leader’s call to action against the Supreme Court at political rallies on Tuesday, the truck blockades gained steam on Wednesday as Bolsonaro was slow to push back against a key segment of supporters.
But in their meeting, Bolsonaro did not ask the truckers to end the protests, according to a leader who met with the president.
Neither were high fuel prices, a constant truck driver complaint, discussed with Bolsonaro, truck driver Francisco Burgardt said.
“We are mobilized for liberty and the freedom of expression,” he told reporters, repeating Bolsonaro’s claims against Supreme Court decisions.
Burgardt said the truckers would only free the highways if they were received by the head of Brazil’s Senate, Rodrigo Pacheco, who last week refused an unprecedented request by Bolsonaro to impeach a Supreme Court justice.
Grains traders said the blockades had not disrupted exports, but soy growers said shortages of inputs would push up their costs and the protests could delay crop harvesting if they did not end soon.
The protests pushed up transport costs for animal feed, Valdecir Martins, head of grain sourcing at a unit of the world’s largest meatpacker JBS SA, said in a webinar.
Soaring diesel prices have contributed to nearly double-digit inflation in Brazil, hurting an economic recovery from the world’s second-deadliest coronavirus outbreak and raising fears of a major trucker strike like one that paralyzed roads in 2018.
Bolsonaro gained prominence in that year’s presidential campaign with his early support for the truckers and he has remained sympathetic to their complaints of high fuel prices.
However, in recent days allied truckers put the president in a tight spot, casting their hard-line tactics as an extension of his showdown with the Supreme Court, including demands that specific justices step down or revert unfavorable rulings.
“Bolsonaro opened a Pandora’s box,” said Creomar de Souza of the Dharma political risk consultancy in Brasilia, adding that the president now runs the risk of losing support from the fickle, decentralized trucker movement.
The analysts said the truckers had a “mixed agenda” and saw in Bolsonaro an ally who will confront the establishment.
The president, however, appeared to back down from his angry confrontation with the top court justices that has raised fears of a breakdown of Brazil’s democratic system.
“I never intended to attack any branch of government,” Bolsonaro said in a statement on Thursday seeking to defuse the dispute.
He said his strong language at the rallies came from “the heat of the moment” and that any problem with justices should be resolved in courts.
Brazilian grains export group ANEC said on Thursday the protests had not affected exports, but the blockades were a matter of concern and that they were counting on authorities to come up with a solution.
Meatpacker associations Abrafrigo and ABPA said the blockades had not affected movement of live or perishable cargo around the country.
Some truck drivers who stopped on major highways said they were forced to come to a halt by pro-Bolsonaro colleagues who had vandalized their vehicles to strand them in place.
Bruno Rodrigues, 32, who was shipping auto parts, said he was stopped one hour south of Sao Paulo at 4 a.m. by men who threatened to smash his windscreen with rocks.
“They slashed my tire. It’s outrageous. If the stoppage had some benefit, OK, but they are hurting their own brothers on the road,” Rodrigues told Reuters. He said he was losing time for deliveries and would have to pay for the tire repair out of pocket.
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