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Monday, December 23, 2024

Brazil’s Lula returns to regular duties after head surgery


Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was to return to Brasilia on Thursday and his regular duties, after getting the go-ahead from his doctors following emergency head surgery, officials said.

Lula “will return to the capital on Thursday after having received medical authorization to take plane trips,” the government said in an online statement on X.

The 79-year-old president had been convalescing in Sao Paulo, where he had his surgery last week to stop intracranial bleeding that was putting pressure on his brain.

He was seen leaving the Hospital Sirio-Libanes in Sao Paulo wearing a brimmed hat and giving a thumbs-up, but making no comment to the media.

A final medical check-up on Thursday “was extremely satisfactory — he is well,” Lula’s doctor, Roberto Kalil, told journalists.

“Quite simply, the hematoma no longer exists,” he said.

The doctor added that Lula had been instructed to avoid physical exercise but “obviously he will be able to do normal activities — his cognition is perfect; he can work.”

Another of Lula’s doctors, Ana Helena Germoglio, said that Lula was going directly from the hospital to Brasilia, where he would spend Christmas.

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Lula had his emergency surgery — which involved drilling through his skull — on December 10, after coming down with a headache a day earlier that a scan determined was bleeding in intracranial membranes.

The haemorrhage was linked to a bad fall he suffered on October 19, when he slipped in a bathroom in his presidential residence in Brasilia.

After a follow-up procedure in the hospital on December 12 to prevent blood flow to the area, Lula posted an online video showing him walking through a corridor with Kalil.

On Sunday, Lula was discharged to continue his convalescence in his private Sao Paulo home, pending Thursday’s final approval to travel.

Health issues

Even with the all-clear, Lula’s health has been the subject of concern over the years.

He had successful treatment in 2011 for throat cancer, and a hip replacement operation last year.

In the weeks following his October fall, which required stitches to his head, the president skipped planned overseas trips. 

But from mid-November he resumed his active schedule, hosting leaders of the G20 grouping in Rio and attending a regional summit in Uruguay.

The succession of problems has cast a shadow over the possibility of Lula running for re-election in Brazil’s next presidential polls, in 2026.

Once back in Brasilia, Lula was to participate in a ministerial meeting on Friday.

The president’s health scare and recovery comes as his government seeks congressional approval of budget changes that have created unease in the market.

The Brazilian currency, the real, has weakened considerably this year, losing more than a quarter of its value. 

Since late November it has been sharply losing ground against the US dollar, which on Thursday was fetching around 6.15 reais.

The depreciation was expected to continue despite Brazil’s central bank last week raising its key rate to 12.25 per cent — its third consecutive hike.

Those rate increases, which the bank signalled were likely to continue, are to counter persistently high inflation, which is running at an annualized rate of 4.87 per cent, according to the latest data in November. 

That is well above the bank’s target of three per cent, and even above its upper tolerance threshold of 4.5 per cent.

But other indicators are doing well in the Brazilian economy — Latin America’s largest — with growth expected to exceed three per cent this year and unemployment at a 12-year low of 6.2 per cent.

Nevertheless, investors are worried about the government’s ability to impose fiscal discipline, especially in the face of creeping public expenditure.

At the end of November, Brasilia unveiled budget adjustments designed to cut around $11 billion in spending, but they also came with tax breaks for the country’s middle class.

Lula’s government is betting the lower tax take for that segment will be offset by the higher imposition on high earners — but investors appear unconvinced.

Disclaimer: This story has been published from a news agency feed with minimal edits to adhere to WION’s style guide. The headline may have been changed to better reflect the content of the story or to make it more suitable for WION audience.



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