Lula: Brazil court rejects request to free ex-president pending appeal Published duration 26 June 2019 Related Topics Operation Car Wash

image copyright Getty Images image caption Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva says the corruption charges against him are politically motivated

Brazil's Supreme Court has delayed its decision over an appeal by former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva against his convictions for corruption.

Judges also rejected a proposal that Lula be freed until they reach a verdict, which is now scheduled for August.

His lawyers argue that the judge who convicted him, Sergio Moro, was not impartial and had acted politically.

Lula led Brazil between 2003 and 2010, and is an iconic figure for the left in Latin America.

Lula had entered last year's presidential election, but Mr Moro's arrest order forced him out of the race.

At the time, Mr Moro was a powerful judge behind the so-called "Car Wash" corruption investigation, an unprecedented probe that centred on political bribes from state-run companies.

Lula's arrest paved the way to victory for Brazil's current right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro, who went on to make Mr Moro his justice minister.

image copyright EPA image caption There have been large protests in support of, and against, Lula since his arrest

Mr Moro has denied any wrongdoing and ignored calls to resign from his new post.

However his impartiality was thrown into question following a series of leaked private messages he allegedly exchanged with prosecutors before Lula's first conviction in 2017.

The messages, published in The Intercept, appear to show him asking the prosecutors to publish press releases criticising Lula's defence, and sharing investigative tips with them when he was legally obliged to remain impartial.

But Brazil's Supreme Court said these messages needed investigating before they could be admitted as evidence.

"We had already presented countless evidence that the ex-president did not have a fair, impartial, independent trial," lawyer Cristiano Zanin Martins told reporters, according to news agency AFP.