Cartoons

Bolsonaro and the chloroquine trophy

Even if you are not a football fan, you may well have seen the image of Brazil’s captain Cafu holding the golden World Cup trophy aloft in 2002, the country’s fifth world title. In fact, as the story goes, the gesture of lifting a trophy above one’s head was invented by a Brazilian: national team captain Hilderaldo Bellini back in the 1958 World Cup final. Mobbed by journalists at the end of the match, one photographer asked the champion to lift the trophy high above his head, so he could get a better picture. Ever since, it has been the iconic gesture of celebration, inside and outside of sport.

Why, then, would anyone be repeating such a celebratory act during a global pandemic, which has killed more than 81,000 Brazilians? Well, you should ask President Jair Bolsonaro. At the weekend, instead of a trophy, Mr. Bolsonaro held a small box of antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine above his head, before a mob of his faithful supporters in Brasilia.

Since contracting Covid-19 two weeks ago, President Bolsonaro claims he has been taking hydroxychloroquine every day, and has tipped the drug as a potential cure for the disease. Odd, then, that after two weeks of taking hydroxychloroquine, the president is still testing positive. Nevertheless, this is a country in which almost one in five citizens believes that Bolsonaro’s elixir is in fact the cure for Covid-19.

According to Marcos Calliari, head of polling institute Ipsos Brazil, Brazil has the second-highest rate of believers among 16 surveyed countries, behind India, where 37 percent trust in the drug. Not to mention those who believe that garlic has some kind of healing power against the virus. 

“Chloroquine, chloroquine,” the crowd yelled, while Jair Bolsonaro turned the box of the medicine into a trophy. While perhaps ludicrous to outsiders, it is but another day in Brazil under President Bolsonaro. 

Support this cartoon →

Lucas Berti and Jika

Lucas Berti covers international affairs — specialized in Latin American politics and markets. He has been published by Opera Mundi, Revista VIP, and The Intercept Brasil, among others.

Recent Posts

Market Roundup: The new skills corporate board members need

The specialization trend among corporate board members It is not only a matter of perception:…

1 day ago

As elections near, what’s next for Panama’s closed copper mine?

Panama will hold its presidential elections on Sunday, months after huge protests saw thousands descend…

1 day ago

Madonna concert to inject BRL 300 million into Rio economy

The city of Rio de Janeiro estimates that a Madonna concert this Saturday on Copacabana…

2 days ago

Panama ready to vote as Supreme Court clears frontrunner

Latin America’s trend of banning opposition candidates from elections has caught on in an ever-growing…

2 days ago

Sabesp privatization edges closer with São Paulo legislation

The São Paulo City Council on Thursday approved legislation authorizing Brazil’s largest city to sign…

2 days ago

Brazil’s AI regulation gets first draft to guide upcoming debates

The preliminary report on AI regulations presented to Brazil’s Senate last week provides a middle-of-the-road…

2 days ago