SAO PAULO — Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said Thursday he will veto a bill that could significantly reduce the 27-year prison sentence of former President Jair Bolsonaro, who was arrested in November for attempting a coup.
The Senate passed the bill late Wednesday, following approval by the Chamber of Deputies.
''With all due respect to the National Congress, when it reaches my desk, I will veto it," Lula told journalists in Brasilia, noting that those who committed crimes against Brazilian democracy ''will have to pay for their acts.''
The text is also expected to be challenged at the Supreme Court.
The bill reduces the final sentences of defendants convicted under multiple charges stemming from the coup attempt, including Bolsonaro.
The former president's lawyers appealed to the Supreme Court after his conviction, saying his prison term was excessive. They also argued that the sentences for abolishing the rule of law and attempting a coup should not be added because they arose from a single episode.
The proposed law would speed up sentence progression from harsher to more lenient prison regimes for those convicted.
There is no consensus on how much time Bolsonaro would actually serve if the bill takes effect. Under current rules, the former president could move to a less restrictive prison system after 7 years if he met legal requirements while incarcerated.