Brazil ex-leader Lula's supporters camp outside jail Published duration 9 April 2018 Related Topics Brazil political crisis

image copyright EPA image caption Supporters of the ex-president say they will not budge until he is released

Hundreds of supporters of the former Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, have set up camp outside the cell where he is being held.

Lula has been sentenced to 12 years and one month in prison for corruption and money laundering.

He handed himself in to federal police on Saturday in São Paulo and was flown to the southern city of Curitiba.

The former leader says he will continue to fight against his conviction, which he says was politically motivated.

image copyright EPA image caption Lula's supporters quickly got organised outside the police HQ where he is being held

Polls conducted before he was jailed suggested that Lula, who governed from January 2003 to December 2010, was the frontrunner in October's presidential election but his imprisonment has left the race wide open.

As a convict Lula would normally be barred from standing for election in October, but Brazil's top electoral court will make the final decision if and when he submits his candidacy.

Lula's routine in jail for the first 10 days of settling-in

image copyright EPA

Morning coffee with bread and butter

Lunch and dinner tray with plastic utensils

No outside food allowed during the settling-in period

No visits except for those from his lawyers in this 10-day period

Allowed into the prison courtyard for two hours a day

Cell measures 15 sq m (160 sq ft) with access to private toilet and shower

Supporters of the former leader say they will not budge from the "Free Lula" camp until he is released.

Security around the federal police building in Curitiba where he is being held was strengthened after some of Lula's supporters clashed with police on Saturday night. Nine people were injured.

image copyright Reuters image caption Riot police cordoned off the federal police building

Police estimated the numbers of people camping around the building on Sunday afternoon at about 700, with more due to arrive.

The leader of the Workers' Party, Gleisi Hoffmann, said Lula was "a political prisoner" and that his party would not give up the fight to have him released.

image copyright EPA image caption Gleisi Hoffmann (right) was in combative spirits

Ms Hoffman said she hoped his release could come as early as Wednesday, when the Supreme Court could revisit its decision, taken only last Thursday, that defendants whose first appeal has failed can be jailed.

It would only take one of the justices to change their mind for Lula to be released to pursue his appeals against his conviction, which could take months if not years.

However, if the appeals were to go against him, he would still face jail eventually.