The choice of a creationist to lead the agency that regulates postgraduate degrees in Brazil is further evidence of the governmentās assault on science and universities, academics have said.
Jair Bolsonaroās administration appointed Benedito GuimarĆ£es Aguiar Neto president of the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (Capes) agency at the end of January.
Mr Aguiar Neto is a former rector of Mackenzie Presbyterian University, a private religious institution in SĆ£o Paulo, where he promoted the teaching of āintelligent designā. He has regularly talked of his belief in creationism and disbelief in evolution, according to Brazilian media.
Brazilian academics toldĀ 51³Ō¹ĻĀ that the announcement was the latest in a series of attacks on science, research and education since Mr Bolsonaro became president last year.
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His government has already made large funding cuts to federal universities and has halved the Ministry of Scienceās budget. An earlier appointment ā ofĀ Abraham Weintraub as education ministerĀ ā was also badly received. The right-wing economist has been widely ridiculed for a series of gaffes on Twitter.
Mr Aguiar Neto will lead Capes, a federal government agency under the Ministry of Education, which oversees quality assurance in undergraduate and postgraduate institutions and awards postgraduate grants to students at universities and research centres.
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āIt is not a secret here in Brazil that Bolsonaro was elected with great support from Christian/evangelical conservative churches. The problem is that Bolsonaro does not respect secularism in governmental decisions,ā said Adriana Marotti de Mello, professor of business at the University of SĆ£o Paulo.
She added that Mr Aguiar Netoās background at a private, Presbyterian university also demonstrated the governmentās preference for private universities over the public system, even though public universities undertake 95Ā per cent of Brazilās research.
Jefferson Cardia SimƵes, professor of glaciology and polar geography at theĀ Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, agreed that Brazilās scientific community was ādiscouragedā by the appointment but said he hoped that Mr Aguiar Neto would know how to āseparate religious beliefs from scienceā.
āI hope he realises that our advances in various areas of knowledge, from medicine to the search for oil and gas resources, are based on the theory of evolution,ā he said.
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Antonio Marques, professor of biodiversity at the University of SĆ£o Paulo, said the problem was not Mr Aguiar Netoās religious background but rather the governmentās placing someone āwho clearly believes in pseudoscience and has promoted anti-science actions in a position to manage the future and decide the direction of the nationās scienceā.
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