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Brazil protests disrupt Independence Day celebrations | Brazil protests disrupt Independence Day celebrations |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Protesters in Brazil have disrupted Independence Day celebrations, demanding better public services and an end to corruption. | Protesters in Brazil have disrupted Independence Day celebrations, demanding better public services and an end to corruption. |
In Rio de Janeiro, some 200 protesters interrupted the traditional Seventh of September military parade, shouting anti-government slogans. | |
They clashed with police, who threw tear gas and arrested dozens of people. | |
There were further clashes in the capital, Brasilia, where President Dilma Rousseff was giving a speech. | There were further clashes in the capital, Brasilia, where President Dilma Rousseff was giving a speech. |
She said there was "still a lot to be done" in Brazil and that there were "urgent problems to be addressed and the population has the right to demand changes". | |
But she said the country had "progressed as never before in the last few years". | |
The official ceremony went ahead without incident, but hundreds of demonstrators later clashed with police outside the Congress building. | |
Demonstrators also attempted to make their voices heard outside the Mane Garrincha stadium ahead of a friendly match between the Brazilian football team and Australia. | |
Police stopped the march, which degenerated into violence. Some 50 arrests were made. | |
Many demonstrators accused the police of using excessive force. | |
"They never spoke to us. They came in in great numbers and began throwing tear gas canisters," student Leticia Hellen told Agencia Brasil. | |
Tear gas | |
In Rio, people who had gone to the parade with their families were caught up in the violence. | |
"I never thought I would go through this. My God! In such a beautiful country," said 63-year-old Josefa da Silva, who had been affected by tear gas. | |
The protests continued into the evening near the Rio de Janeiro state governor's palace. | |
Police stopped demonstrators from approaching the building, in the Laranjeiras district, arresting some 50 people. | |
Streets were blocked off for several hours and a metro station was closed due to the violence. | |
Activists had used social media to call for protests in more than 150 cities. | |
Most of them went ahead peacefully, but there were clashes in a number of other protests, including those in Fortaleza and Curitiba. | |
In Brazil's largest city, Sao Paulo, police said around 2,000 people took part in a march calling for social justice. | |
The demonstration were largely peaceful, but towards the end activists attacked police officers and vandalised shops and bank branches. | |
Brazil saw a big wave of protests in June, as the country prepared to host the football Confederations Cup. | Brazil saw a big wave of protests in June, as the country prepared to host the football Confederations Cup. |
Initially, demonstrators demanded that a hike in bus and underground fares be revoked. | Initially, demonstrators demanded that a hike in bus and underground fares be revoked. |
But the demonstrations grew into a much larger movement against corruption and excessive spending in preparations for next year's World Cup and the 2016 Olympics, which Rio will host. | But the demonstrations grew into a much larger movement against corruption and excessive spending in preparations for next year's World Cup and the 2016 Olympics, which Rio will host. |