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Over a Dozen Presidents and Hillary Clinton Will Be at Inauguration of Brazil’s New President

Fourteen presidents, at least, including Colombia’s Juan Manuel Santos and Venezuela’ Hugo Chavez, plus US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have confirmed they will be present next January first in Brazilian capital Brasília for the inauguration ceremony in which Dilma Rousseff will take office as Brazil’s first woman president. 

The Brazilian Foreign Affairs ministry said that other leaders and dignitaries who have confirmed attendance are Uruguay’s Jose Mujica, Argentina’s Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, Chile’s Sebastián Piñera, Bolivia’s Evo Morales, Peru’s Alan García and the heir to the Spanish Crown Prince Felipe.

Other leaders who will be coming to the ceremony include the prime ministers of South Korea and Algeria and the Prince of Qatar.

Next January 1st president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva steps down after eight years in office while Dilma will be receiving the presidential sash during a ceremony at Planalto Palace, Government House. President Rousseff will then make the traditional “pronouncement to the nation.”

On Friday, Rousseff, who was absent from the Mercosur summit, attended a ceremony at the Electoral Supreme Tribunal where she was handed the document that confirms she was the winner of last October 31st runoff and thus the next Brazilian president.

In related news the weekly magazine “Isto É” chose outgoing president Lula as “the Brazilian of the Decade” and Ms Rousseff the “Brazilian woman of the Year”.

“Lula da Silva has walked into history as the most popular president ever”, pointed out “Isto É” adding he helped to build a “more fair, more ethical, more transparent and better world for all of us.”

Dilma Rousseff was named the Brazilian Woman of the Year 2010 since she is the first woman president to be elected in Brazil.

“I hope to honor all Brazilian women from next January. Again I’m facing the challenge of the election, I succeed a government that has built a road to development for Brazil…and managed to convince our country to be well aware of our strength as a nation,” said Rousseff.

Other figures distinguished by the magazine were former Minas Gerais governor Aécio Neves named “Brazilian politico of the year.” Following on José Serra’s defeat last October Neves has taken over as the main leader of the opposition.

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