In a move that reeks of political revenge, Brazilian authorities have thrown former President Jair Bolsonaro back into police custody, launching a shock raid just hours before a massive prayer vigil organized by his supporters—a detention his lawyers call a blatant attack on constitutional rights and a “deeply perplexing” abuse of power.
The order came from Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, a longtime nemesis of the right-wing leader, who cited an “escape risk” based on alleged tampering with Bolsonaro’s ankle monitor and the “tumult” of the planned gathering. The timing is explosively suspicious: by detaining Bolsonaro immediately before his supporters could assemble, the government effectively beheaded a peaceful demonstration and isolated the former president at the most symbolically powerful moment.

The judge’s decision reveals the state’s paranoia, noting that Bolsonaro had previously considered seeking asylum—a claim his team dismisses as they prepare an urgent appeal. With his son, Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, rallying supporters to “come fight with us,” the detention has instantly ignited the very political fire the authorities claimed they wanted to contain, setting the stage for a major confrontation.
Why It Matters
The government’s justification—that a peaceful prayer vigil posed an imminent “escape risk”—is so flimsy that it’s almost insulting. This was never a case of flight risk; it was about cutting off a political leader from his base at a critical moment of mobilization. The state has shown its hand: it fears Bolsonaro’s influence more than it respects the rule of law.
By moving now, the Lula administration and its allies in the judiciary are attempting to crush the opposition before it can gain momentum. But this heavy-handed tactic may backfire spectacularly. Turning a former president into a martyr on the eve of a major rally doesn’t quell dissent—it pours gasoline on the flames of resistance. This isn’t justice; it’s the raw exercise of power, and it may well ignite the very crisis it claims to be preventing.















