Some 50,000 protesters returned to Brazil's largest city vigorously demonstration Tuesday night, angry towards what they call corruption and inefficient government, has long neglected the needs of a growing middle class street.
Through social media, mostly peaceful, like the previous night drew 240,000 in the streets of several cities in demonstrations against shoddy South American giants in this booming state, public transport, schools and other public services, well-organized protests. Many people criticized Brazil's tax burden too heavy, notoriously poor infrastructure gap.
From the initial surge of protests last week by a group of complaining about the high cost of a tragic public transport system, and asked in the bus and subway fares rose 10 cents rollback.
Despite protests increased, reversing the increase is still one from the street to the specific needs. The rest, so far, expressed deep anger and resentment - and not just with the ruling government, but with the entire management system. A common cries, rallies have been "no party!"
Yasmine Gomez said: "I hope the protests from the ruling class to understand that we are responsible, not them, politicians must learn to respect us, a 22-year-old squeezed into Tuesday night's protests began in Sao Paulo Center Plaza.
Nearby, Bruno BARP, and a 23-year-old law student, said he hopes that more and more sports.
"Protests are gaining strength every day, there is a huge amount of energy can not be ignored," BARP said protesters into the central square, which is fluttering banners and chanting slogans reverberate. "All the Brazilians are fed up with the government and the poor service we received, everyone is ready to fight for a change."
Although the Brazilian political demonstrations in recent years, participants generally tend to attract small numbers, the latest mobilize solidarity crowded around the central laments: Government to provide public sector outlook is bleak, even in economic modernization and development.
Brazilian Tax Planning Institute think tank found that state tax burden in 2011 for the gross domestic product (GDP) of 36%, ranking No. 12 in the 30 countries with the world's highest tax burden.
However, schools and other public services are in sorry shape. Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development in 2009 education survey found that Brazil's 15-year-old child's literacy and math skills # 53 of 65 countries, behind countries such as Bulgaria, Mexico, Turkey, Trinidad and Tobago , Romania.
From many street protests in Brazil the country's growing middle class, government figures showed that about 40 million in the past decade surge in a commodity-driven economic boom.
They say they have lost patience with the popular issues, such as government corruption and incompetence. They also blasted the Brazilian government has spent billions of dollars to host next year's World Cup and the 2016 Olympics, while the other unmet needs.
Reports from the government in November increased to 13.3 billion World Cup stadiums, airports and other renovation project is expected to cost. City, state and other local governments spend more than $ 1.2 billion in projects in the Rio de Janeiro Olympics. Spent nearly $ 500 million renovation of the venue for the World Cup, even though they have experienced a significant face-lift before the 2007 Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro's Maracana Stadium.
Agatha de Paula Rossi lawyers, who together with her mother attended a recent protest in Sao Paulo, Brazil's financial priority called "embarrassing."
"We just want our tax paid by health, education, transport, said:" 34 years old. "We want the police to protect us, and help people who have not been completed, and on the streets have no money."
Reduce bus fares advocacy organizations have launched protests last week, but there is no central leadership has begun to surge in demonstrations. Brazilians are also small groups staged protests Tuesday in other countries, including Portugal, Spain and Denmark.
Network attacks knock the government's official World Cup website offline and publish anonymous Twitter feed Brazilian hacker group linked to a host of other government sites, their content has been replaced urged citizens came to the streets of the screen.
Tuesday March in Sao Paulo began peace, but becomes a nasty outside City Hall, when a small group attacked the police and tried to invade the building.
Faced with different groups of protesters chanted "Peace, peace," while trying to form a human cordon to protect the building, trying to climb on the other metal rod inside. A person at one point, trying to catch a metal barrier from another who is trying to use it to smash doors and windows of buildings.
After demonstrators and police pepper spray and smoke set a TV satellite truck and a police lookout booth, fire, air thick.
Sabotage and violent clashes with the police, also destroyed most of Monday's peaceful march ends in Rio de Janeiro, leaving the city's downtown smell of tear gas. Attracted about 10 million people, the end of March, a small splinter group made an estimated $ 1 million damage to the historic State Capitol. Another mass protest planned in Rio de Janeiro day (Thursday).
Protests questioned, the countries willing to host high-profile events, including the Pope's visit Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo countryside next month. Brazil is playing host this week's Confederations Cup, which is seen as a warm-up for next year's World Cup.
Police and military had subsided in the past year on the hillside slums, or even an event in Rio de Janeiro to prepare grievances apparently growing middle class in the country.
President Rousseff (Dilma Rousseff), former leftist guerrilla who was imprisoned and tortured during the dictatorship, known as the protest, despite her government has been a major goal of the demonstrators frustration.
"Brazil today woke up stronger," she was quoted in her office said in a statement released.
"Those people took to the streets, and published a news society as a whole, the most important levels of government," Rosoff said. "Yesterday a huge scale protests proved that the sound power of our democracy, street culture, the energy of our population."
She did not propose any concrete answers to appease the protesters' anger. Some cities have reduced bus fares sought to quell public outrage, so far without any significant results.
Sao Paulo Mayor Fernando Haddad said Tuesday that he would try to juggle the municipal budget to roll back the fare increases. Helped organize protests in Sao Paulo, the group has pledged to continue until the price down.
Rousseff general secretary, Carvalho, Gilberto said the protests reflect a richer new demand in Brazil.
"Gives the impression that we have to overcome some obstacles, but society should be more," Carvalho said.
Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said, "urged the Brazilian authorities in dealing with the spread of today's social protest in the country to exercise restraint and called on protesters not to resort to violence to pursue their demands."
Join the United Nations agencies in their Tuesday release of "welcome Brazilian President Rosoff (Dilma Rousseff) statement is legitimate peaceful protest."
Human Rights Watch called on the government Paulo properly investigate police use of force against demonstrators promise. Police attacked demonstrators in a rally on Thursday to help spark record turnout images in Monday's demonstrations, which is in Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Brasilia, Belo Horizonte, Curitiba, Vitoria, Futa Lai Sa, Recife, Belem and El Salvador held.
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