"I'm still in the game," the 71-year-old leftist politician told a news conference.
It was Lula's first public reaction to the nine-and-a- half year sentence handed down yesterday by an anti-corruption judge who found him guilty of taking bribes and money- laundering.
Lula, who has been leading in voter intention polls, portrayed the verdict as an attempt to prevent him from being a candidate in the October 2018 elections.
He accused the judges arrayed against him in several corruption cases of "destroying democracy in our country" and engaging in a "witch hunt."
Lula said he was convicted "without proof" yesterday by anti-corruption judge Sergio Moro, who found that the former president received a luxury beachside apartment and USD 1.1 million in cash from one of Brazil's biggest construction companies, OAS.
Lula, in power from 2003 to 2010, remains free while his lawyers appeal the verdict.
His conviction, a stunning fall from grace for one of Brazil's most popular presidents in modern times, comes amid a sprawling, three-year corruption probe into kickbacks from construction groups and state oil giant Petrobras to political parties, particularly Lula's Workers' Party.
Although the verdict against him can be overturned by a higher court on appeal, Brazil's justice system moves slowly, posing a major obstacle to a run for the presidency.
But Lula brushed that aside, saying: "I want to tell my party that, from now on, I am gong to call on the Workers' Party to put me forward as its candidate in 2018."
Moro, who has earned widespread popularity for his unflinching campaign against corruption in Brazil's political class, is also seen as a possible presidential candidate.
In addition to his conviction, however, the former president also faces four other graft cases, including allegations of a USD 3.7 million bribe to buy land to build his Lula Institution highlighting his political legacy, and claims he received a kickback in Brazil's purchase of Swedish warplanes.
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