Sunday, January 26, 2014

Clashes mar Brazil World Cup protest

Brazil police arrest dozens after anti-World Cup protest

A car burns in flames during in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on January 25, 2014. A car was set ablaze and shops were attacked in central Sao Paulo

Police in the Brazilian city of Sao Paulo say they have detained 128 people during clashes that followed a demonstration against this year's football World Cup.

A car was set on fire. Shops, banks and a police vehicle were also damaged.

The violence forced the authorities to cancel some of the festivities planned for the city's 460th anniversary.

Earlier, some 2,500 people took to the street to complain about the costs of staging the World Cup in Brazil.

They marched through central Sao Paulo waving flags, carrying banners and chanting: "There will be no Cup".

Other Brazilians protested on Twitter, saying "Fifa go home", in reference to football's world governing body. There were similar small protests in Rio de Janeiro and other cities.

"We are against the millions and millions of dollars being spent for the Cup," university student Leonardo Pelegrini dos Santos told the Associated Press news agency.

People take part in a protest in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on January 25, 2014. The violence was in sharp contrast to an earlier peaceful protest

"It is money that should be invested in better health and education services and better transportation and housing."

Sporadic vandalism

Saturday's peaceful protest was marred by sporadic acts of vandalism which turned into clashes with the police.

Some demonstrators attacked an empty police car and tried to overturn it, while others torched a small car. They also burned tires and targeted banks and others businesses.

The Sao Paulo state Governor Geraldo Alckmin condemned the violence.

Fifteen people were also reported to have been detained at a protest near the World Cup stadium in Natal, a city in north-eastern Brazil.

Last year, more than a million people took to the street in dozens of Brazilian cities over poor public services, corruption and the high cost of the World Cup.

The wave of protests prompted Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff to propose a referendum on political reform.

She also pledged to invest 50 billion reais ($25bn, £16bn) in public transport, one of the protesters' main grievances.


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