World Cup only benefits outsiders, say Brazil protesters
June 19, 2013 -- Updated 1231 GMT (2031 HKT)
Belo Horizonte, Brazil (CNN) -- At 11 pm, the tired and the injured gathered in Belo Horizonte for one last expression of discontent.
More than a thousand sat
in Praca Sete de Setembro, a square in the center of the city, chanting
against the government and the police. But they weren't the crowd's only
enemy. A sign hung from a nearby balcony. It read: "Anti Copa." On the
pavement the words "A FIFA é Foda" had been painted: "F*** You, FIFA,"
in Portuguese. The roads had been blocked off by the military police,
who watched the protesters from afar. A bank of police horses chewed on
piles of hay left for them on the road.
Daniel Sanabria, a
technician in his 20s, stood nearby cradling his arm, an ice pack on top
of a bloody bandage. He peeled it off to reveal an ugly red welt on his
left hand. "A bullet," he explained.
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The day was supposed to
have been something of a coronation for Belo Horizonte, a relatively
quiet and small city -- if a population of 2.5 million people could ever
be called small -- surrounded by mountains, an hour's flight north of
Rio de Janeiro.
Its famous Mineirao
football stadium had just hosted its first match of the 2013
Confederations Cup, a 6-1 victory for African champions Nigeria against
the tiny Pacific islanders of Tahiti. It was a dry run for next year's
World Cup finals which return to Brazil for the first time since 1950, a
chance to prove that the country was ready to host the most world's
most popular sports tournament.
Instead, military and
civilian helicopters flew overhead, roads were blocked and military
police stationed throughout the city as a series of protests sparked by
anger about the cost of living, poor quality education and high
transport costs took place at the same time as the match.
The initial spark for the
protests was a rise in bus fares in Sao Paulo. The anger was such that,
even in a country often caricatured for its deification of soccer, the
World Cup, its surrogate cousin the Confederations Cup and the game's
global governing body FIFA, have all become symbolic of corruption and
waste.
Protesters believe the
tournament has seen the rich line their pockets, while the poor make do
with crumbling public services. The World Cup, it seems, has sparked
something that has lain dormant for a long time.
And this year we rise. We have woken up. We are on the streets like in Turkey and Greece. They have made us wake up about this.
Tainara Freitas
Tainara Freitas
"Tonight this is about
all of Brazil, we are moving against corruption. We have been suffering
for too many years," said Tainara Freitas, a teacher who had remained
with the protest until the end.
"And this year we rise.
We have woken up. We are on the streets like in Turkey and Greece. They
have made us wake up about this. The World Cup in Brazil is about too
much money. There are too many poor people suffering. The World Cup
isn't good for Brazil. It will bring tourists and money but this is not
good for poor people."
Earlier in the day
15,000 protesters had marched towards the Mineirao as hundreds of
thousands of Brazilians took to the streets across the country in the
first coordinated mass protests of this size since the end of Brazil's
military dictatorship in the mid 1980s.
Police responded with
tear gas, firing rubber bullets into the crowd, and beat protesters who
burned barricades in return. I watched Tahiti's brave performance on the
pitch as the protesters gathered outside, speaking to Brazilian sports
writer Igor Resende at half time about the match and the reasons for the
anger. A few hours later he was in hospital after apparently being shot
in the back with a rubber bullet.
"The police came with a
brutal force," recalled Resende. "I didn't see the protesters do
anything. The police threw a bomb and it exploded in the middle of the
protest. Then police began to shoot."
Resende said he was hit in the back by a rubber bullet as he ran away.
"In that moment I just
ran. I thought that if I looked back the police would probably shoot me
again. I don't think the police are well prepared. They are badly paid.
They have a bad life. They act like this because they are scared."
But Resende said he has doubt that the police response was related to the Confederations Cup.
"I spoke to one of the
highest ranked police guys in state yesterday. He told me 3,500
policeman were on the streets because of the game. They are acting to
avoid conflict near the stadiums. The police and FIFA don't want the
protesters near the stadiums."
For FIFA, who have been
critical of Brazil's preparations for the World Cup, the protests are an
unwelcome complication for a tournament already long behind schedule.
"People are using the platform of football and the international media
presence to make certain demonstrations," said FIFA president Sepp
Blatter who, alongside the Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff, was booed
by the crowd at the opening ceremony on Saturday.
Speaking in an interview
in Rio on Monday, he said: "You will see today is the third day of the
competition this will calm down. It will be a wonderful competition."
But the protests have
not calmed down. The day after Blatter's interview, the biggest
demonstrations yet took place. Sanabria and Freitas agreed that the
Confederations Cup, which continues for another 12 days, is an
opportunity to make their voices heard.
I asked them both what messaged they wanted to send FIFA and the football world.
"Please, please, make
more pressure on our government, on the Brazilian government to look out
for us," said Freitas before she made her way back into the protest,
Sanabria still clutching his injured hand.
"They are looking out for people outside the country, they aren't looking for us, for the poor people."
The protestors now have the world's attention.
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