Marisa Letícia, Wife of Former Brazilian President Lula, Dies

Marisa Letícia Rocco, wife of former Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, died this Thursday, February 2, in the city of São Paulo from an aneurysm, said the Workers’ Party lawmaker Benedita da Silva.

Rocco, 66, was taken on to the emergency room at Sao Paulo’s Hospital Sírio Libanês on January 24 due to a stroke, but her health quickly deteriorated. She was in an induced coma and her doctors described her condition Wednesday as “irreversible.”

“I want to announce the death of the wife of former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who has authorized us to do so, and ask for a moment of silence on behalf of who was the first lady of Brazil,” said the Workers’ Party (PT) Benedita da Silva, a representative in Brazil’s lower house of Congress.

Rocco was Brazil’s first lady between 2003 and 2011, and was accused several times without proof of allegedly accepting, along with Lula, bribes from construction giant Odebrecht, one of the companies implicated in the corruption scandal centered on state-run oil company Petrobras.

Lula published on his Facebook page a message thanking “all the expressions of affection and solidarity received in the last 10 days for her recovery.”

Rocco had four children, three of them with Lula, and was his second wife. They married in 1973 when they were both widows, and she participated in the founding of the Workers’ Party in 1980.

“The family authorized the preparatory procedures for organ donation,” Lula had written on his Facebook page nearly an hour before news of his wife’s death was released.

Lula, despite being continuously accused of corruption, has suggested more than once that he may be a candidate in Brazil’s 2018 presidential election.

teleSUR

Tags:

You May Also Like

Silhouette of Indigenous leader Tereza Arapium in the famous Copacabana beach sidewalk. Image by Mongabay

Indigenous People Are Close to Brazilians in the Big City. But People Don’t Know It

During a presentation for Indigenous People’s Week, celebrated in April in Brazil, at his ...

Brazilian Senator and Her Husband, Both Rousseff’s Ministers, Charged with Corruption

Brazilian Senator Gleisi Hoffmann and her husband, Paulo Bernardo Silva, who both served in ...

Karl Marx (1818-1883), philosopher, author, social theorist, and economist.

Thanks to Bolsonaro the Cultural Marxism Conspiracy is Alive and Well in Brazil

“Cultural Marxism” is a right-wing conspiracy theory that accuses the Frankfurt School — comprised ...

Dani Silva, center, alongside Francineide Ferreira dos Santos and Raimunda Gomes da Silva. All three were expelled from their land. | Pablo Albarenga

For Dani, Defending the Amazon Is Defending the Planet’s Life

Some 40 kilometers from the Brazilian city of Altamira, ‘Photograph Belo Monte’ is written ...

Brazil House Approves Constitutional Amendment Limiting Public Spending for 20 Years

Brazil’s Chamber of Deputies on Monday night (October 10) voted 366-111 (with two abstentions) ...

Expo should have extended till October 8, 2017 - Photo: Fredy Vieira/Publicity

The Moral Crusade of the Right Is Now Investing Against the Arts in Brazil

An art show has become Brazil’s latest political battleground. For those who didn’t get ...

Lula being carried by his fans after leaving prison

Brazil’s Supreme Court Decision Frees Lula and Thousands Others from Jail

Brazil’s former president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva walked free from jail on Friday ...

High Abstention in Brazil Shows an Angry and Frustrated Electorate

The first round of municipal elections in Brazil having transpired with no major incidents, ...

Lula wearing a typical hat from Brazil's Northeast - Photo: Ricardo Stuckert/Instituto Lula

If He Doesn’t Go to Jail and People Don’t Change Their Mind, Lula Will Be Brazil’s Next President

Despite being sentenced to nine years and six months over alleged corruption charges in ...

Brazil's presidential candidates: Jair Bolsonaro, Marina Silva, Geraldo Alckmin, Ciro Gomes, Fernando Haddad

Who Will Compete With Bolsonaro to Become Brazil’s Next President?

With Jair Bolsonaro certain to reach the second round of Brazil’s elections in October ...