The minister of the (Supreme Federal Court) defended the sovereignty of Brazil and said that the country was no longer a colony in 1822. Without quoting the United States, the magistrate cited Brazil’s independence and the construction of the (United Nations) against Nazism.
Moraes made the statements after him climbing. The speech was made during the plenary session of the Court on Thursday (27), before starting the case report on the Authority Authority Law that reports. He participates in video conferencing.
“I reaffirm our full oath of defense of the Brazilian Constitution and the sovereignty of Brazil, for the independence of the judiciary and the citizenship of all Brazilians, because we are no longer colony on September 7, 1822 and with courage we are building an independent and increasingly better republic,” he said.
Until then, the Supreme Ministers had been minimizing the actions taken in US territory provided that the minister’s orders are declared illegal.
About the UN, Moraes recalled that the organization was created 73 years ago in 1952, when the first meeting of the entity was held at its permanent headquarters in New York. According to Moraes, the UN performance follows the same line of the time, in defense of human rights and “respect for the self -determination of peoples”.
“Today, it houses 193 Member States and two observing states, which remain with the same ideas of that time: the struggle against fascism, against Nazism, against imperialism, in all its forms, whether virtual, virtual, and also the defense of democracy and the consecration of human rights. Objectives desired by all 193 member states, without discrimination, without coercion between states,” he said.
In this Thursday’s session, Moraes also cited the through social networks. Dino wrote that the ministers of the Supreme, when they take office, swear to defend the Constitution and the principles of self -determination of peoples, non -intervention and equality between the states – in Article 4 of the Federal Constitution.
He also wrote that Moraes will remain by giving lectures in Brazil and abroad. “And if you want to spend beautiful holidays, you can go to Carolina, Maranhão. You will not miss other places with the same name,” said Dino, referring to the US eponymous states.
“Thank you and I say that it will be a great pleasure to know the beautiful Carolina of the State of Maranhão, that her excellence so well ruled for two terms, which is an example of courage and struggle for independence and self -determination of the Brazilian people and defense of citizenship as the history in the Balaiada revolt demonstrates between December 1838 and February 1841,” Moraes said.
Following, the president of the court, Luis Roberto Barroso, endorsed the speech. According to him, the Supreme Court will maintain guardian stance of democracy.
“We know what we had to pass to avoid the collapse of the institutions and a coup here in Brazil. The attempt to prevail the narrative of those who supported the coup will not prevail between people truly good and democrats. The Supreme Court will continue to fulfill its role as guardian of the constitution and democracy. We do not fear the truth,” he said.
Under reserve, earlier this week, magistrates and advisors close to them say that there is no significant impact on the Supreme routine and deny major concerns about the movements of the president, allies and pockets in the country.
Priority target of the offensive, has no real estate or property in the country and, therefore, would not be giving much importance to the measures for not being affected by them.
The other magistrates maintain similar line. So far, they follow the news, but without mobilizing internally to ask for an institutional defense or response position.
Still on Tuesday (25), before the publication of the US State Department, the dean of the Supreme, said in conversation with journalists being “very extravagant” the presentation of a lawsuit against Moraes in an American court.
“The way to challenge judicial decisions is to challenge before the court itself that is competent,” he said.
On Wednesday night, in which he states that the government distorts the meaning of the orders of Moraes.
“The Brazilian government firmly rejects any attempt to politicize judicial decisions and emphasizes the importance of respecting the republican principle of the independence of powers, contemplated in the Brazilian Federal Constitution of 1988,” he said in the text.
The statement states that the Brazilian government was caught by surprise by the state department’s note, its equivalent body in the country, “regarding legal action filed by private companies that country to exempt themselves from the fulfillment of decisions of the Brazilian Supreme Court.”