Brazil’s Bolsonaro tests positive for COVID-19, shrugs off health risks

By MiNDFOOD

Brazil’s Bolsonaro tests positive for COVID-19, shrugs off health risks
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said on Tuesday he tested positive for the novel coronavirus after months minimising the severity of the pandemic and defying medical experts, even as the virus killed more than 65,000 people in his country.

The right-wing populist gave the news to reporters at his official residence standing just inches away from him, adding to criticism of his cavalier approach to the outbreak in Brazil, the world’s worst outside the United States.

Even as he announced his infection, the 65-year-old former army captain dismissed the dangers of the virus and credited unproven treatments for his mild symptoms, echoing his political role model US President Donald Trump.

“If it weren’t for the test, I wouldn’t know the result. And it turned out positive,” he told the television cameras, adding he had started to feel sick on Sunday and grown worse on Monday, with a fever, muscle pains and exhaustion.

The president said he was taking hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malarial drug with unproven effectiveness against COVID-19 that has been touted by Trump and some of his supporters and pro-government factions in Brazil as a potential cure.

Finishing the interview with three TV channels Bolsonaro stepped back and removed his mask to reveal a smile, adding: “You can see from my face that I’m well and I’m calm.”

Bolsonaro, like Trump, has blasted experts at the World Health Organization and voiced scepticism about the virulence of the virus, although the US president has moderated his tone.

The Brazilian leader repeated his claim on Tuesday that the risks of COVID-19 were exaggerated and most Brazilians did not need to worry: “Be assured that for you the chance of something more serious is close to zero.”

With more than 1.6 million confirmed coronavirus cases in Brazil Bolsonaro’s handling of the crisis has drawn criticism from public health experts as he fought state and city efforts to impose social distancing, arguing that the economic damage would be worse than the disease itself.

He has fired two health ministers during the pandemic, both trained doctors, and replaced them with an active-duty army general on an interim basis.

Asked about Bolsonaro’s health, a White House spokeswoman said, “We wish him well and a speedy recovery.”

Brazilian financial markets retreated after the news on Tuesday, with Brazil’s currency swinging into negative territory and its main stock index falling as much as 1.7%.

VIP VISITS

Bolsonaro joins a short list of government leaders infected with the coronavirus, including British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez, both of whom were treated in hospitals and needed extra oxygen.

His positive test looks set to spark a frantic period of contact tracing and tests for those who met Bolsonaro in recent days, including Economy Minister Paulo Guedes, lender Banco Bradesco, Chairman Luiz Carlos Trabuco and planemaker Embraer CEO Francisco Gomes Neto.

Over the weekend, Bolsonaro was also in close contact with US Ambassador Todd Chapman during July 4 celebrations, and pictures showed neither wearing a mask. The US embassy said Chapman had tested negative, but would remain in quarantine.

After his diagnosis, Bolsonaro said he would keep working via videoconference and “rarely receive one person or another to sign a document”.

Pan American Health Organization director for communicable diseases Marcos Espinal wished Bolsonaro a “speedy recovery” but said his infection carried a message.

“The message is that this virus is unpredictable and does not respect race, class or people in power, despite security around any president,” Espinal said. “For Brazil, the infection of its president should reinforce the need to strengthen implementations of social distancing recommendations and the use of masks to mitigate the spread of coronavirus.”

Bolsonaro has often defied local guidelines to wear a mask in public, even after a judge ordered him to do so in late June.

In March, he suggested in a televised national address that he was not concerned by the idea of contracting the coronavirus.

“With my history as an athlete, if I were infected by the virus, I would not have to worry. I would feel nothing or, at most, it would be a little flu or a little cold,” he said.

FILE PHOTO: A woman walks past graffiti depicting Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro adjusting his protective face mask and viruses, amid the coronavirus outbreak in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil July 2, 2020. REUTERS/Sergio Moraes/File Photo

A PRESIDENT IN DENIAL

Bolsonaro has repeatedly minimised the gravity of the coronavirus and resisted measures to mitigate its spread. As of Monday, Brazil had registered 1,623,284 total coronavirus cases and 65,487 deaths attributable to the virus.

Following are some of Bolsonaro’s comments on the disease.

March 9, speaking to Brazilians in Miami:

“The coronavirus question, to my mind, has been exaggerated, the destructive power of that virus.”

March 24, in a televised address to the nation:

“With my history as an athlete, if I were infected by the virus I would not have to worry. I would feel nothing or, at most, it would be a little flu or a little cold.”

March 26, to reporters:

“It won’t get that bad (compared to the United States). Brazilians should be studied, they don’t catch anything. You see a guy jumping in a sewer and nothing happens to him.”

March 29, touring streets outside Brasilia without a mask:

“This is the reality: The virus is there. We have to face it, but face it like a man, damn it, not like a kid. We’ll confront the virus with reality. That’s life. We’re all going to die one day.”

April 12, addressing religious leaders via videoconference:

“It seems the matter of the virus is starting to go away.”

April 20, asked by a journalist about the latest death toll:

“Look man, I’m not a gravedigger.”

April 28, asked by journalists about the rising death toll:

“So what? I’m sorry, but what do you want me to do?”

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