World / Environment

Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro says he will be killed, arrested or re-elected

13:07 pm on 29 August 2021

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has said he sees three alternatives for his future: prison, death or victory in next year's presidential election.

Indigenous people protest in Brasilia on 26 August against President Jair Bolsonaro's support for a a roll-back of indigenous rights. Photo: AFP

The right-wing populist leader is trailing left-wing former president Luis Inacio Lula da Silva in the polls.

"I have three alternatives for my future: being arrested, killed or victory," he told evangelical leaders.

But the former military officer said there was no chance of prison because "no man on Earth will threaten me".

Bolsonaro was nearly stabbed to death on the campaign trail in 2018. His remarks come amid fierce tensions between him and the country's judiciary and election authorities.

The 66-year-old president, who hopes for a second term next year, has been questioning Brazil's electronic voting system and threatened not to accept the result of next year's presidential election.

Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro is threatening not to accept the result of next year's presidential election. Photo: AFP

On Wednesday, the head of Brazil's electoral court insisted there was no problem with the voting system.

But at a meeting with Christian leaders on Saturday, Bolsonaro refused to back down in his criticism.

"We have a president who neither desires nor provokes a rupture, but everything has a limit in life. I can't continue to live with this," he said.

The president urged the evangelical leaders to join planned nationwide demonstrations on 7 September in support of him.

On Friday, 150 indigenous people protested in front of his presidential palace ahead of a key supreme court ruling on their ancestral lands.

Bolsonaro has backed a roll-back of indigenous rights, saying they are a block on agricultural expansion.

While grappling with coronavirus, which has killed more than half a million Brazilians, the country is also struggling with high inflation, hunger and unemployment.

- BBC