Joao Goulart, widely known as Jango, died in 1976 in exile in Argentina. His cause of death was deemed to have been a heart attack.
Howaever, former Uruguayan intelligence officer has said Joao Goulart was poisoned by agents working for the region’s military governments.
Joao Goulart governed from 1961 to 1964.
The president, a progressive leader with left-wing sympathies during the height of the Cold War, was deposed in the 1964 military coup.
He fled first to Uruguay, where he settled as a farmer, and in 1973 to Argentina on the invitation of its president, Juan Peron.
Joao Goulart was found dead on December 6, 1976, in the Argentine city of Mercedes, nine months after a military junta had overthrown the government of Juan Peron’s widow, Isabel Peron.
Officials at the time said he had died of a heart attack, but no post mortem examination was carried out by the authorities in either Argentina or Brazil, where he was taken for burial.
Doubts about his death resurfaced five years ago when a former Uruguayan intelligence officer serving a sentence for drug smuggling in Brazil alleged Joao Goulart was poisoned by Uruguayan agents at the request of Brazilian military rulers.
The intelligence officer, Mario Neira, said the alleged murder was part of Operation Condor, a plan under which the military governments of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay collaborated to eliminate their political opponents in the 1970s and 80s.
Mario Neira alleges that Joao Goulart died after his heart medication was swapped with one altered to cause a cardiac attack, by agents working on behalf of the Brazilian military.
Brazil’s National Truth Commission, which started work last year, agreed to investigate the claims with the help of the presidency’s human rights commission.
“Today we will open a new chapter in the tale of mystery which has surround the death 37 years ago of the former president,” the human rights commission said in a statement.
“The exhumation will put an end to the anguish of his family and thousands of Brazilians who have sufficient reason to believe that his death did not occur spontaneously, as stated in the death certificate – which was issued without a prior post mortem examination,” they added.
The former president’s grandson, Joao Marcelo Goulart, said it was “a historic moment not just for the family but also for the country and all the relatives of those killed, disappeared, tortured and exiled by the military dictatorship”.
Joao Goulart’s remains will be exhumed on Wednesday from the family pantheon in Sao Borja, a small Brazilian town near the Argentine border.
Local media say they will then be taken to the capital, Brasilia, where an official ceremony is planned to make up for the fact that Joao Goulart was the only Brazilian president to be buried without the honors usually given to a former head of state.
Toxicology tests will be carried out on the remains and sent abroad to be analyzed, local reports say.
Up to 500 people were killed or disappeared under Brazil’s military rule – a far lower number than in shorter periods of military rule in neighboring Argentina and Chile.
Thousands of Brazilians were tortured, exiled or deprived of their political rights.
nqLGCtaYruIThe US House Ethics Committee has voted to release its report on former Republican Representative…
ABC News has agreed to pay $15 million to President-elect Donald Trump to settle a…
South Korea’s parliament has voted to impeach President Yoon Suk Yeol over his failed attempt…
Israeli war planes have carried out more than 100 air strikes in Syria on December…
President-elect Donald Trump has threatened to impose 100% tariffs on the BRICS countries if they…
Syrian troops have withdrawn from the city of Aleppo following an offensive by rebels opposed…