Saturday, January 29, 2011

Rousseff breaks the bonds of Brazil with Irn rge

In a speech received a standing ovation in Rio Grande do Sul, to Holocaust survivors, the Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff struck late on Thursday for his vigorous defense of human rights by their country in the world: "My Government will a tireless advocate for equality and human rights anywhere in the world, "he said.

"We are not a people hater, nor a people that respects the hatred, why Brazil has a historical position to be proud of." President's speech to the influential Jewish Confederation of Brazil (CONIBO), was interpreted as a clear change of Brazilian foreign policy towards Iran after the strong ties forged by former President Lula, especially during his second term, the president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The Tehran regime executes homosexuals and women sentenced to death for adultery, as is the case Sakineh-Ashtiani, and also denies the Holocaust. Perhaps that is why, during the ceremony, the president of the Conibo Claudio Lottenberg ophthalmologist, said the change in Brazilian policy regarding Iran.

Even distinguishing attacks on Israel are the president and not the Iranian people as a whole, Lottenberg was happy to learn that the president Dilma Rousseff today has a different position from that held by President Lula in the past. " In the first interview he gave Rousseff after taking office on 1 January for an average American, in this case The Washington Post, the president has already revealed a shift in position towards Iran.

To Rousseff, the people of Brazil "is composed of values that respect two principles: peace and reconciliation." Speaking at the ceremony of the International Day in memory of Holocaust victims, Rousseff reminded that the world ignored at the time of the Second World War (1939-1945) signals the advance of barbarism before the rise of Nazism " and that the Holocaust opened an era of "industrial violence" and "scientific torture." In the presence of Holocaust survivors Max and Sara Schanzer Perelmuter, 87, Rousseff reminded that for centuries the Jewish people maintained their homeland through their intellectual, books, culture, religion and family life to conquer their natural homeland .

"A right," he said, "can not be denied to any people."

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