1.739386-2174910546
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva with President Dilma Rousseff. It has been a remarkable rise for a woman who less than a year ago was a little-known career technocrat who never before held elected office, but Silva used his enormous popularity to help propel her to the presidency. Image Credit: AFP

Brasilia: A former Marxist guerrilla who was tortured under Brazil's dictatorship as a student rebel was set to become the first woman president of Latin America's largest nation on Saturday.

Dilma Rousseff takes the presidency from Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, her political mentor who used his enormous popularity to help propel her to the presidency. It's been a remarkable rise for a woman who less than a year ago was a little-known career technocrat who never before held elected office.

Tens of thousands of Dilma supporters arrived in the capital, Brasilia, early yesterday, waving banners, sporting Dilma T-shirts and painting their faces in the bright red color that represents the ruling Workers Party.

Rousseff inherits a nation on the rise. In the eight years under Silva, Brazil has sharply cut poverty while its economy has boomed, and it has increased its political clout on the global stage. Brazil will host the 2014 World Cup and is expected to be the world's fifth-largest economy by the time the 2016 Olympics come to the nation.

But huge challenges also await Rousseff, who served as Silva's energy minister before becoming his chief of staff, where her tough managerial manner earned her the moniker "Iron Lady."

Uphill task

In addition to sweeping improvements Brazil needs in its infrastructure, security and education, she confronts the danger of following the charismatic Silva, who leaves office with an 87 per cent approval rating.

"Dilma will have to meet high expectations that the country is on an upward trajectory and life will continue to get better for the average Brazilian," said Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue. "That will not be an easy challenge."

Shifter said it could prove difficult for Brazil to maintain the pace of success it saw under Silva.

The external economic scenario could worsen, cutting into strong demand for Brazil's agricultural and industrial exports, particularly if anything should dampen China's growing appetite for Brazil's goods. The Asian nation this year passed the US as Brazil's biggest trading partner.

And Rousseff will need a strong economy to improve the nation's woeful airports, ports, and roads _ all vital in transporting Brazil's raw goods to market and in hosting the World Cup and the Olympics _ events Brazilians hope will bolster their newfound image as a nation that gets things done.

Rousseff also will have to handle the unwieldy political coalitions required to govern Brazil. Silva was able to satisfy the leftist elements in his Workers Party, while at the same time employing orthodox economic policies to calm the business community that fretted early on about his socialist roots.

Rousseff, 63, lacks Silva's political acumen and charisma and it is not yet known if she will be able to command the far-flung components of the Workers Party while also keeping other factions happy in a coalition government.