The bill, approved in December, cut Bolsonaro’s prison term to just over two years and reduced sentences for those convicted over their roles in a January 2023 riot, when Bolsonaro supporters invaded and ransacked the presidential palace, Supreme Court and Congress.
Also Read: Apple says India antitrust body overstepping judicial authority as spat intensifiesLula vetoed the bill in January, arguing that there was strong evidence to support the conviction of Bolsonaro and other coup plotters.
Bolsonaro, 71, began serving his sentence in November. He was initially jailed but is currently under what authorities described as “humanitarian house arrest” due to health concerns.
The former president, who has gone through several surgeries since he was stabbed in the abdomen during a campaign event in 2018, spent weeks in a hospital in March due to an acute form of pneumonia.
(Edited by : Juviraj Anchil)

