Brazil’s surprise election issue: Iran

RIO DE JANEIRO, (Reuters) – For sunbathers on Rio’s  famed Ipanema Beach last weekend, the sight was about as odd as  an oncoming snowstorm.

“Respect life, Ahmadinejad!” read a banner trailing from an  airplane flying above the shore.

Brazil’s warm relationship with Iran has become a surprise  issue in October’s presidential elections, as candidates try to  seize on fears that the ruling party is too cozy with foreign  dictators and harbors authoritarian tendencies of its own.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has dedicated  much of his final year in office to trying to defuse the  confrontation between the West and his Iranian counterpart,  Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, over Iran’s nuclear plans.

Lula, who says Ahmadinejad’s ambitions are misunderstood,  is forbidden from running for a third term. But his preferred  successor and former chief of staff, Dilma Rousseff, has had to  parry accusations that their Workers’ Party is soft on  censorship and intolerant of opposing political views.

“This is all about human rights,” opposition candidate Jose  Serra said in a campaign speech last week. He said the Iranian  regime “stones women to death, arrests journalists … and  hangs dissidents for the simple fact of thinking differently.”

“In my government, we’re going to reject that,” he said.

As a thriving democracy with a robust economy and a free  press, Brazil’s politics are not remotely comparable to Iran’s.  Yet some voters have never overcome their suspicions of the  Workers’ Party’s origins as a hard-left party of trade union  leaders, some of whom still advocate placing the media and vast  sectors of the economy under tight control of the state.

“I have no doubt that Lula and his friends would make  Brazil more like Iran if they could,” said Luiz Comim, a  lawyer, as he bought a newspaper in Rio.

The Iran issue has provided Serra, who is trailing Rousseff  in polls, with a rare opportunity to differentiate himself  since both candidates are relatively market-friendly  center-leftists. Serra has shied away from direct criticism on  most other issues because Lula is massively popular and  Brazil’s economy is booming.

But members of Serra’s party have accused Lula of  unnecessarily straining relations with the United States over  Iran.

Rousseff has defended Lula’s Iran policy, saying it could  help avoid war in the Middle East.

She has also rejected the notion that she or Lula  sympathize with authoritarian or populist governments in Iran,  Venezuela and Cuba, saying that “good contacts” are crucial  with all countries and that Brazil’s situation is different.

Indeed, the Workers’ Party has become more pragmatic,  especially since Lula took office in 2003. However, just last  month, Rousseff had to backpedal after signing a manifesto  calling for higher taxes for the rich and reforms that would  aid the expropriation of large land holdings.
The platform was posted on Rousseff’s Web site and then  withdrawn hours later. She later said the document was written  by party members who did not represent her views.

For now, Iran does not appear to be a game-changing issue  among most Brazilian voters, who are focusing more on the  economy. Rousseff has opened up a five to 10 percentage point  lead in polls and some analysts say only a major event like a  corruption scandal could cost her the race.

Yet there are flickers of dissent.

Twitter users continue to post hundreds of messages a week  calling for Lula to intercede on behalf of Sakineh Mohammadi  Ashtiani, an Iranian woman sentenced to death by stoning for an  extra-marital relationship. Lula offered asylum to Mohammadi  Ashtiani earlier this month, prompting an embarrassing public  rejection of his offer by Iran.