Wednesday, October 10, 2012

You mean there's racism outside the US?


Barbosa made Brazil's first black Supreme Court leader


The judge overseeing a major corruption trial in Brazil has been appointed president of the Supreme Court, the first black person to hold the post.
Judge Joaquim Barbosa, who was born into a poor family, has been praised for his judicial independence.
He will take over the post once the "Mensalao" corruption trial ends.
Brazil has the largest black population after Nigeria, many of them descendants of African slaves, but black people rarely achieve high office.
Judge Barbosa, who is 58, has been appointed by other judges, following the Court's tradition of nominating its most senior member.
'Invisible barriers'
Born in the remote town of Paracatu and the son of a builder, Mr Barbosa was educated in Brazil's much criticised state school system.
He later moved to the newly built capital, Brasilia, where he studied for a law degree at the city's best university.
To support himself through university, he worked as a typist and a cleaner in one of the city's courts, and later began a successful career as a public prosecutor.
In 2003, he became a household name in Brazil when he was appointed by then President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to the Supreme Court.
Two mixed-race judges had previously been members of the court, but Mr Barbosa said he was the first one who could be "widely recognised as a black man".
"This act has great significance, as it indicates to society the end of certain visible and invisible barriers," he said at the time.
He has been in the spotlight in Brazil in the last two months as the rapporteur of the case against some of former President Lula's key aides.
The case became known locally as "Mensalao", or "the Big Monthly" allowance.
Judge Barbosa angered government supporters when he convicted senior members of President Lula's government.
On Tuesday, former chief of staff Jose Dirceu, the Workers' Party's former president, Jose Genoino, and treasurer Delubio Soares were found guilty of corruption.
Most judges in the Supreme Court followed Joaquim Barbosa's rapport, where he accused the three men of using public funds to pay members of Congress for support in crucial votes.
President Lula was not implicated in the scandal.

No comments: