Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff pledged today to hold talks with her growing number of critics and said her embattled government needed to show humility, a day after massive protests erupted across the country.
Rousseff was narrowly re-elected less than six months ago in a bitterly fought runoff but is already facing pressure to quit over a snowballing $3.8 billion graft scandal at state oil firm Petrobras which has dragged in her ruling coalition and seen calls for her to be impeached.
Her mounting woes include a badly faltering economy and on Sunday protests against her took place in major towns and cities across Brazil, laying bare the scale of public discontent.
In a closely watched speech in Brasilia, Rousseff said her underpressure government had to open "dialogue" with society and act with "humility."
Rousseff, a former guerrilla leader imprisoned and tortured under the 1964-1985 military dictatorship, added she was "committed to governing for 200 million Brazilians, those who voted for me and those who did not."
Charges Against Treasurer
Prosecutor Deltan Dallagnol said testimony collated by investigators appeared to show Vaccari "urged payment of a portion of bribes in the form of electoral donations" to the PT.
"It is important to underscore that Mr. Vaccari did not take part in any network to take bribes or resources of illegal origin that were meant for the PT," his defense attorney Luiz Flavio Borges D'Urso said in a statement.
Rousseff chaired the Petrobras board during much of the alleged corruption period.
She is not being investigated, but leaders of her ruling coalition have been named in an ever-widening probe.
They include Senate president Renan Calheiros and Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies Eduardo Cunha, key figures in the centrist Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, or PMDB, a vital component of Rousseff's ruling coalition.
So far, 13 senators, 22 deputies and two governors have been placed under investigation in an affair which has enraged the public.
That, coupled with an economy which spent much of last year in recession and claims of impunity and corruption at the highest levels of office triggered Sunday's peaceful and colorful protests.
They followed a first wave in June 2013 which saw similar large numbers of disgruntled civilians demonstrate over transport fare hikes and the spending of billions of dollars on last year's World Cup and next year's Rio Olympics.
More Protests Planned
But whereas the 2013 demonstrations targeted the political class in general, Sunday's marches primarily took aim at Rousseff.
Some anti-Rousseff campaigners want the president impeached, but most observers see that as unlikely even if "people are very frustrated with the electoral process, all the corruption and deterioration of the economy," said Michael Mohallem, professor of political science at the Getulio Vargas Foundation in Rio.
Rousseff has proposed anti-graft reforms that include a ban on companies providing political campaign finance, a system open to abuse.
As Rousseff looks to ride out the storm, more protests are slated for April 12.
Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's press secretary Ricardo Kotscho said that "clearly today a political cycle is coming to an end in Brazil. The Dilma government has run out of ammunition and no longer knows what to do to calm the masses."
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