
IMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS Image caption, With over 600,000 fatalities, Brazil has the second-highest Covid-related death toll in the world behind only the US
The report is the culmination of a six-month inquiry that has revealed scandals and corruption in government.
President Bolsonaro has been accused of failing to control the virus that has killed more than 600,000 Brazilians.
The panel wants Mr Bolsonaro to face a number of criminal charges, including crimes against humanity.
Reacting to the report, the president insisted that “we know that we are guilty of absolutely nothing”.
“We know that we did the right thing from the first moment,” he said.
But these recommendations were dropped from the final 1,200 page report.


The last minute changes to the report are a measure of just how charged the political atmosphere is here in Brazil.
These past six months, Brazilians have been glued to the inquiry that has revealed scandal after scandal, and there’s no doubt in anyone’s mind – left or right of the political spectrum – that this has done damage to Jair Bolsonaro’s popularity.
And that’s where the sticking point seems to have been – original accusations of mass homicide and indigenous genocide have been removed from the report because there was no consensus. Instead, they’ve been replaced by the crime of “epidemic resulting in death” – as well as other charges including crimes against humanity and misuse of public funds.

Despite the serious allegations, it is not clear what this means for Mr Bolsonaro, according to our correspondent.
The draft report still needs to be voted on by the Senate commission where it could be vetoed and altered, and there is no guarantee it will lead to criminal charges.

President Bolsonaro has dismissed the Congressional inquiry as politically motivated. He has frequently spoken out against lockdowns, masks and vaccinations.
In March, he told Brazilians to “stop whining” about Covid, a day after the country saw a record rise in deaths over a 24-hour period.
However, Mr Bolsonaro’s popularity has already been dented by the pandemic, and this report could make life much harder for him if he wants to run for a second term in Brazil’s 2022 elections.
Speaking to the BBC ahead of the report’s publication, the inquiry rapporteur, Senator Renan Calheiros, said the panel wanted to punish those who contributed to “this massacre of Brazilians”.