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Getting Ready for Cuban Democracy in Brazil PDF Print E-mail
2005 - February 2005
Written by Augusto Zimmermann   
Saturday, 26 February 2005 14:46

Poster of Brazilian motion picture FeminicesThe Constitution of Brazil seems to fully protect freedom of expression for intellectual, artistic, scientific, and media activities. In its Article 220, the basic law of this nation explicitly says that manifestations of thought, expression, and information must not be subjected to governmental restrictions for political, ideological, and artistic reasons.

Regardless of what this Constitution says, the Workers’ Party (PT) government has decided to introduce a highly controversial bill on audiovisual affairs.

If approved, this bill creates a National Agency of Movies and Audiovisual Affairs, the Ancinav, with full powers to exercise control over radio and television stations, communication services with audiovisual content (including telephony and the Internet), as well as the production, distribution, and the showing of movies (including television films and news reports).

The President of the Republic, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, would be free to nominate board members of such powerful agency, for a four-year term.

The Ancinav would be endowed with powers to investigate and restructure the strategic plans of cinematographic and audiovisual companies. The bill explicitly calls for the “planning, regulation, administration, and monitoring of cinematographic and audiovisual companies”, in their “production, programming, distribution, exhibition, and divulgation”.

It states that the Ancinav would preserve the ‘confidentiality’ of technical, operational, and even financial records requested from these companies, which also implies that this federal agency could force them to provide strategic and/or financial information.      

The Ancinav would be financed by resources obtained from new taxes over advertisement, the rent and/or purchase of VCRs and/or DVDs, and a 10% increase in the price of movie tickets. This increase would obviously transform cinema into an even more elitist entertainment in this country.

Also, it would make just impossible for the majority of theatres to exhibit movies with small public demand, such as those produced by specialised film companies.(1) In this sense, the bill violates Article 215 of the Brazilian Constitution, which declares that the state needs to support the maximum diffusion of cultural expressions.

In explaining why the National Congress should approve this sort of bill, the Lula administration suggests that the Ancinav would support the national filmmaking industry to promote ‘civic re-education’ towards a ‘better sense’ of Brazil’s ‘national identity’.

Since the idea is confessedly to control cultural expressions, including those with scientific and/or artistic value, a prestigious lawyer, Ives Gandra, has accused the PT government of willing to exercise its full control over artistic, cinematographic, and audiovisual activities, similarly to what happened in the past in places like the former Soviet Union and Nazi Germany.(2)

In fact, the first attempts toward an unduly control over freedom of expression have already been carried out. Since President Lula took office, in 2003, state companies can only sponsor social and cultural projects in tune with the ideology of those who are in power.

A state oil and gas distribution company, Petrobras, has informed that ‘social views’ of the current administration must be taken into consideration for social and cultural projects to be funded. Other state companies such as Eletrobrás and Furnas communicated the same conditions for the financing of social and cultural activities.

In relation to the problem of the Ancinav, a prestigious member of the highly selected Academia Brasileira de Letras (Brazilian Academy of Letters), history professor José Murillo de Carvalho, wrote an insightful piece on the subject in daily newspaper Jornal do Brasil. He suggests that this law proposal creating the Ancinav constitutes an attempt to establish one the worst forms of censorship a government has ever produced in the whole history of this country.(3)       
 
A leading daily newspaper, O Estado de S. Paulo, commented in an editorial that the bill of Ancinav is authoritarian, bureaucratising, statist, and, as a result, would result in a return to former instruments of censorship in Brazil.

The editorial also suggests that calling the law proposal ‘only’ authoritarian is too bland and small, as it reveals that President Lula is certainly not joking when he says that countries like Cuba and Venezuela are ‘models of democracy’ to be imitated.(4)

References

(1) See: Revista Veja; Um Desastre de Lei. 13 October 2004, p.120.
(2) Martins, Ives Gandra da Silva; O Retrocesso Democrático. Jornal do Brasil, 36 August 2004, p. A13.
(3) Carvalho, José Murillo de; O Novo DIP. Jornal do Brasil, 29 December 2004, p.B2.
(4) O Estado de S. Paulo, Debaixo do Parangolé da Ancinav. Editorial, 26 September 2004.

Augusto Zimmermann is a Brazilian Law Professor and PhD candidate for Monash University – Faculty of Law, in Australia. The topic of his research is the (un)rule of law and legal culture in Brazil. He holds a LL.B and a LL.M (Hons.) from the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, and is a former Law Professor at the NPPG (Research and Post-graduation Law Department) of Bennett Methodist University, and Estácio de Sá University, in Rio de Janeiro. His email address is: augustozimmermann@hotmail.com.



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Comments (15)Add Comment
Re: funding ‘social views’ of the curren
written by Guest, February 27, 2005
I wonder if anti-Americanism (read discrimination against Americans) is a "social view" of Lula's "administration".
Who better than americans to pick on?
written by Guest, February 27, 2005
Let's bash the sobs!
Have some balls then
written by Guest, February 27, 2005
Have Brazilian congress declare a state of war.
Re: Who better
written by Guest, February 27, 2005
That would actually show what Brazil is: Can't even respect it's own anti-discrimination laws!
Who better - Part 3
written by Guest, February 27, 2005
I am just joining the rest of the world regarding the love affection to the USA!

It's a love hate kinda situation...Watch out for Osama Being Farting, yankies!
what f**k country
written by Guest, February 27, 2005
We can not believe. Such thing is happening.
...
written by Guest, February 27, 2005
are you literate lol?
Brazil society still authoritarian
written by Guest, March 02, 2005
Sometimes I wonder if I being a Brazilian can I burn my flag? Can I speak out without being arrested, beat up, or shoot to dead? Can I tell a policimen that I'm speaking to him and not the uniform or the institution? can I? What! should only care for some newsperson, or reporters who don't even care to show that we still living in a country ruled by the authoritarism! being with lula, or the generals, or the senzala sinhorzinho! Or can I speak out about my on country without being push aside by my countrymen? So are saying this constitution protect me? now before any bill?ah.
Courts
written by Guest, March 14, 2005
Well, if the bill is unconstitutional, it should not pass the Legislature. If it does pass, wouldn't the courts find it to be unconstitutional?
Here they come
written by Guest, March 14, 2005
The USA is number one crowd…Get over youselves. The US has the same kind of problems with its leaders trying to do crazy unconstitutional stuff all the time, like laws against gay marriage, anti-flag burning laws, and imposing Ten Commandments displays…People who love the Constitution and freedom, however, have some confidence that in a democracy such efforts will fail in the end against the narrow minded fools that try that kind of stuff. And haven't you been seeing anything about the Bushies' propaganda in the US? Paying reporters as shills for administration policies? Closeted gay faux reporters tossing softball questions at the administration? Pull your head out and be critical without being a nationalistic fool.
To: Here they come
written by Guest, March 24, 2005

George W. Bush is the most voted president in the entire history of the United States.

His positions against abortion are both according to the Christian worldview of the American founding fathers.

And he got my admiration for calling good what is really good and evil what is really evil.

Under his leadership, the United States leads another difficult battle against totalitarian ideologies and rogue states. The world must be always grateful to this country and his great president.
CHRISTIANITY AND LIBERAL DEMOCRACY
written by Guest, March 24, 2005
The fundamental values of the democratic liberal tradition were in fact exemplified, formulated, and wrought into the texture of Western society by Christianity, not only as a school of thought but as a way of life and feeling: as a religion, in short.

It is not safe to assume that the democratic ethos will persist while the faith and doctrine that gave birth are being deliberately abandoned. The logic of thought, the evidence of history, and the testimony of current events are all opposed to that assumption

The Christian teaching with the greatest implications for democracy is the belief that because humanity is created in the image of God, all human beings are of equal worth in the sight of God.

Along with the Greek Stoic belief in equality as a reflection of the universal capacity for reason, this belief in shaped an emerging democratic consciousness, as Alexis de Tocqueville noted when he observed in the introduction to his study of democracy in America that Christianity, which has declared all men equal in the sight of God, cannot hesitate to acknowledge all citizens equal before the law
George W. Bush
written by Guest, March 25, 2005
He's not "the most voted president in the entire history of the United States," whatever that means. He is, however, the dumbest President in the history of the US. He is also a danger to the world, which is a status that brings him little admiration, except from morons like you.
\"Free Press\"
written by Guest, March 25, 2005
See the in-depth article in the New York Times, "Under Bush, a New Age of Prepackaged TV News" by DAVID BARSTOW and ROBIN STEIN, published: March 13, 2005, and you'll learn something about propoganda US style, packaged for Bush-backing simpletons like the guy above.
ringtones free
written by Guest, June 08, 2006

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