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Judi Lynn

(160,450 posts)
Sat Apr 29, 2017, 12:01 AM Apr 2017

In Brazil, protesters clash with police as a general strike empties schools and brings business to a

Jill Langlois
APRIL 28, 2017, 7:00 PM | REPORTING FROM SAO PAULO, BRAZIL


Protests large and small swept across Brazil on Friday, leaving businesses closed, schools empty and an unpopular president facing ever louder calls to step down.

For the first time in more than 20 years, Brazilians held a general strike, with millions of workers walking off the job to protest controversial labor and pension reforms that were proposed by a president with an approval rating of just 4% and that are currently moving through Congress. Thousands of protesters took to the streets in the country’s major cities, many carrying signs reading “Fora Temer!” — “out” with President Michel Temer.

Most protests passed without incident, but by Friday night a group of protesters advanced on the Sao Paulo neighborhood where Temer owns a house. They broke up sidewalks and lobbed chunks of concrete at police trying to disperse the crowd with tear gas and flash grenades. Protesters also set some buses on fire, and at least 16 arrests were reported.

A larger, peaceful protest, estimated at 70,000, headed out in the direction of Temer's home from a nearby neighborhood earlier in the evening to protest the president, whom they consider illegitimate, and his recent proposed labor and pension reforms. Temer, the former vice president who succeeded Dilma Rousseff as president after she was impeached last year, still lives in the vice president’s residence in Brasilia, the capital.

More:
http://www.latimes.com/world/mexico-americas/la-fg-brazil-strike-20170428-story.html

LBN:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10141763271

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In Brazil, protesters clash with police as a general strike empties schools and brings business to a (Original Post) Judi Lynn Apr 2017 OP
I was there, among those going to Temer's house. OBenario4 Apr 2017 #1
That sounds very much like control-freak right-wing governments, doesn't it? Judi Lynn May 2017 #2
 

OBenario4

(252 posts)
1. I was there, among those going to Temer's house.
Sun Apr 30, 2017, 07:52 PM
Apr 2017

Very peaceful act. Was ending without incidents, which is the reason why police decided to attack - so they could portray the protests as violent and the protesters as "vandals who had to be controled".

Judi Lynn

(160,450 posts)
2. That sounds very much like control-freak right-wing governments, doesn't it?
Mon May 1, 2017, 12:12 PM
May 2017

I'll bet they got their orders from people higher up, too, to portray the demonstrators as the people who are wrong, and troublesome, people who aren't good citizens.

Completely disgusting. They are trying to turn the negativity from Temer to the people themselves.

Very glad to get your personal account, OBenario4. Thank you.

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