-
Stocks mixed tracking AI concerns, as oil rises on tanker attack
-
Bomb attacks wound 18 in Damascus as Macron visits
-
Paris FC confirm Rosenior taking over as coach
-
Cuba slowly gets power back after third nationwide blackout in six months
-
Thousands without power in US Pacific islands after super typhoon
-
NATO summit showcases arms deals in push to win over Trump
-
Prince Harry to discover outcome of UK tabloids case
-
Seoul dives on tough day for Asia as Samsung fails to ease tech woes
-
Messi v Salah in World Cup last-16 showdown
-
Democrats push key US Senate candidate to quit over sex assault claim
-
Death toll from China storms rises to 15, hundreds injured
-
As South Korean Buddhism woos Gen Z, how hip is too hip?
-
Belgium boosted by Balogun furore: Tielemans
-
'Disappointed' Pochettino says Balogun row no excuse for US World Cup exit
-
Samsung expects 1,800% operating profit leap on AI boom
-
Seoul dives on mixed day in Asia as Samsung fails to ease tech woes
-
Belgium thrash USA to end World Cup dream and set up Spain showdown
-
Belgium dump US out of World Cup after Balogun row
-
France's Le Pen faces pivotal ruling in race for president
-
How US is using cash and threats to dump migrants in Africa
-
NATO allies seek to win over Trump after Iran ire
-
Democrat in key US Senate race denies sex assault claim
-
US leads international concern after China test-fires missile into Pacific
-
Samsung expects 1,800% leap in quarterly operating profit on AI boom
-
Close to tears and on his own as Ronaldo's World Cup dream ends
-
Russian strikes kill at least 26 in Kyiv region on eve of NATO summit
-
Argentina's gruelling World Cup schedule a concern for Scaloni
-
Ronaldo 'won't make rash decisions' following last World Cup game
-
Race to recover bodies ahead of Venezuela quake cleanup
-
Paraguay govt slams lawmaker for racially abusing France's Mbappe
-
Egypt coach Hassan says Palestinian suffering 'a shame on the world'
-
US embraces Balogun World Cup reprieve as world seethes
-
NBA Kings waive six-time All-Star forward DeRozan
-
Spain win it late to give Ronaldo bitter end to World Cup career
-
Greaves and Hope centuries usher West Indies towards safety
-
Spain edge Portugal to end Ronaldo World Cup dream, US eye quarters
-
'I celebrated in bed' -- Norway's Solbakken stays grounded after beating Brazil
-
Spain win it late to bid farewell to Ronaldo at World Cup
-
Canada chooses Germany's TKMS to build new fleet of submarines
-
Trump's fireworks made Washington world's most polluted city
-
Mbappe condemns racist abuse by Paraguayan senator after World Cup clash
-
Stock markets meander as US tech stocks climb
-
FIFA chief forced to defend Balogun World Cup reprieve
-
Britain's Fery stuns Dimitrov, Paolini into Wimbledon quarters
-
Antetokounmpo says goodbye to Milwaukee in video
-
Russian strikes kill 24 in Kyiv region on eve of NATO summit
-
Fairytale Fery sinks Dimitrov to make Grand Slam history at Wimbledon
-
Trump touts latest White House renovation: a new helipad
-
Canadian Artemis II crew member to retire from space agency
-
Fritz powers past Bublik, into Wimbledon last eight again
Brazil town aspires to be champion of Bolsonaro vote
On Holy Christ Avenue, in front of Bible Square, Brazilian businessman Gilberto Klais buoyantly hops out of an SUV decorated with a giant decal of far-right President Jair Bolsonaro.
Smiling in a denim shirt, the 39-year-old head of the local business owners' association is a man on a mission: "On election day, the town of Nova Santa Rosa will cast more votes for Bolsonaro than anywhere else in Brazil," he says.
The small town in the southern state of Parana already voted massively for the incumbent in Brazil's first-round election on October 2, casting 82 percent of its ballots for Bolsonaro -- the second-highest percentage in the country.
Now, as the president heads for a runoff Sunday against veteran leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Bolsonaro backers are pushing for an even bigger win.
But this small community of trim little houses surrounded by endless expanses of soy and corn fields has some tough competition, in one of Brazil's most conservative regions.
The neighboring towns of Quatro Pontes and Mercedes finished third and fifth in the Bolsonaro love fest, voting 80 percent and 78 percent for the former army captain, respectively.
And the town of Nova Padua, in neighboring Rio Grande do Sul state, cast the highest percentage for him with 84 percent.
"Bolsonaro lit our flame for Brazil," says Klais, who owns a local bakery.
Visitors don't have to look far for proof: a sea of yellow-and-green Brazilian flags hangs from buildings -- a symbol Bolsonaro has adopted as his own -- and his smiling face beams from campaign posters all over town.
Opponents' criticisms of the president -- Brazil's 687,000 deaths from Covid-19, increasing hunger, destruction of the Amazon rainforest -- are mute here.
Finding a Lula campaign sign is an impossible task.
Farming is king in these parts, and Bolsonaro, a close ally of Brazil's powerful agribusiness sector, "has given us security to invest," promotes "a strong economy," and upholds God and family "as the supreme good," says Klais.
"He's just like us."
- Battle for Brazil's soul -
On his father's farm, where a feed truck has been turned into a makeshift billboard with Bolsonaro's slogan -- "Brazil above everything, God above everyone" -- Ricardo Lorenzatto is on a mission, too: convince at least 200 of the 800 residents who voted for Lula to switch sides in the runoff.
Bolsonaro "promised to visit the city that casts the highest percentage of votes for him," says the 35-year-old agricultural engineer, his blue eyes alight.
"My heart leaps just thinking about it."
He is active on WhatsApp message groups rallying the faithful for pro-Bolsonaro events, such as an Independence Day motorcade on September 7, which, he proudly boasts, stretched four kilometers (2.5 miles).
Lorenzatto says ex-president Lula (2003-2010), who the far-right labels a "communist," is a threat to his children's future.
If Lula wins, "indigenous tribes could invade our land, force us to share our cattle," he says.
Holding her one-year-old grandson on her porch, Clarice Radoll agrees.
"I would feel very insecure if Lula won," says the 60-year-old Evangelical Christian, who has Bolsonaro's picture proudly displayed on the front of her house.
In this town of a dozen churches and around 6,000 inhabitants, Radoll repeats a line often used by conservative pastors: that Lula represents "moral perversion."
"It's every Brazilian mother and father's fear," she says.
- Agribusiness hero -
In Mercedes, just up the road, farmer Andre Fiedler admits Lula's government also took care of the agribusiness industry during the economic boom of the 2000s.
"I don't want to be a hypocrite," he says.
But Bolsonaro's administration has backed farming and agricultural exports like no other, "opening new markets for our products," he says.
He brushes off international criticism over surging Amazon deforestation under Bolsonaro, which experts say is driven by agriculture.
"People say Bolsonaro is damaging Brazil's image overseas... but that's just a trade game -- protectionism by France, Germany, the United States," Fiedler says.
"Who's the biggest soy producer in the world? The biggest poultry exporter? Brazil," he says.
"There are vested interests trying to hold us back."
Bolsonaro, who took 43 percent of the vote in the first round to 48 percent for Lula, trails his leftist rival heading into the runoff -- but by a narrowing margin, according to opinion polls.
O.Krause--BTB