Ten hurt in Brazilian landless peasants protest

13 Feb 2014 / 13:16 H.

BRASILIA (Feb 13, 2014): Police fired rubber bullets and tear gas Wednesday at about 15,000 landless peasants marching for land reform in Brazil's capital, in clashes that injured two protesters and eight police officers.
The march was the latest in a series of protests rocking the nation, raising security concerns just four months before Brazil hosts the World Cup.
After a peaceful beginning, protesters clashed with police as they neared the presidential palace and began to dismantle barricades.
President Dilma Rousseff was not in the building as the disturbance unfolded.
A spokesman for the marchers told AFP police moved in after some demonstrators began to erect a barricade of tents.
He added two protesters were hurt, while police said eight officers were also injured.
A protest in Rio de Janeiro ended in tragedy Thursday when TV cameraman Santiago Andrade was struck on the head by a flare thrown by a demonstrator, and died of his injuries Monday.
A 23-year-old man suspected of throwing the flare was earlier arrested in northern Brazil. He faces up to 35 years in prison.
This year has seen sporadic demonstrations in Brazil, while the burning of buses in business hub Sao Paulo has become an almost daily occurrence.

Transport hikes blamed
Last week's unrest in Rio was sparked by the latest rise in transport fares, the same issue that prompted nationwide demonstrations in June.
Protests since then have been smaller but more radical as anarchist groups have infiltrated them. Police have responded, sometimes in heavy-handed fashion.
Brazilians are angered by poor public services while their country spends billions of dollars to host the World Cup and the Rio Olympics in 2016.
Rio Governor Sergio Cabral suggested political parties were sponsoring some of the violence.
"There are groups and segments of political parties which reject the democratic process, institutions, the market economy," said Cabral of the centrist PMDB party, part of the ruling coalition.
Jonas Tadeu Nunes, the lawyer defending the Andrade suspect, told Globo television his client had been offered payments of 150 reais (US$62) a time to attend demonstrations designed to destabilise the government.
Nunes did not say who might be behind the payments, although one demonstrator has suggested a link with a radical left lawmaker, who has denied the allegation.
Wednesday's marchers in Brasilia comprised agricultural workers marking 30 years of the MST movement whose previous marches had been peaceful.
Across the square from the protest, Brazil's Supreme Court suspended its session owing to the size of the protest.
The marchers dispersed shortly after the clash with police.
The landless movement has spent decades demanding wide-ranging land reform but frustration has grown at the slow progress being made.
Born in 1984 in the final days of two decades of military dictatorship, the MST has become Brazil's main organised social movement, helping some 350,000 families obtain land.
Earlier, some 700 children of MST workers staged a protest of their own at the education ministry to demand hundreds more schools in rural areas.
An MST educational coordinator complained the past 12 years have seen 37,000 schools closed down in rural areas. – AFP

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