Brazil's Michel Temer charged with corruption
- Published
Brazilian President Michel Temer has been charged with accepting bribes by the country's chief prosecutor.
It is the first time that a sitting Brazilian president has faced charges.
He is accused of receiving money from the boss of a giant meatpacking firm implicated in a corruption scandal. Mr Temer denies any wrongdoing.
The charges have been delivered to a Supreme Court judge who must now decide if the case can be sent to the lower house of parliament.
The lower house would vote on whether President Temer should be tried.
Mr Temer has vowed to prove his innocence. He has faced a slew of accusations since taking office last year but these are the first formal charges against him.
The move follows the release of an audio recording in which Mr Temer appears to be discussing bribes in conversation with Joesley Batista, the chairman of the meatpacking company JBS.
If the corruption case reaches the lower house, Mr Temer's coalition believes it can gather enough votes to block the two-thirds majority needed for a trial to be brought against him.
However, President Temer is expected to face further charges in the coming weeks, correspondents say.
Mr Temer is deeply unpopular in Brazil but his centre-right party has been able to govern as part of a coalition.
His approval rate is just 7%, according to a recent opinion poll.
Opposition parties have been demanding snap elections and his impeachment.
Brazilian politics has become engulfed in political scandal in recent years, with a third of Mr Temer's cabinet under investigation for alleged corruption.
Mr Temer's predecessor, Dilma Rousseff, was removed from office following an impeachment vote in the Senate. She was accused of illegally manipulating the budget, a charge she strongly denied.
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