50,000 March Through Sao Paulo, Brazil to Call for Elections

50,000 March Through Sao Paulo, Brazil to Call for Elections
Fecha de publicación: 
12 September 2016
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“We will not leave the streets until we bring down this latest coup,” said lawmaker Luiza Erundina.

Thousands of people once again filled Paulista Avenue Sunday in the city of Sao Paulo to demand an end to the coup regime and for new elections to be held immediately.

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“This government is illegitimate and we want direct elections now. This is a moment of resistance. If the coup leaders establish themselves (in power), the price will be high,” Guilherme Boulos, a leading figure in the anti-coup demonstrations, told Brasil de Fato.

The coup regime of President Michel Temer, installed after the Congress voted to oust democratically-elected President Dilma Rousseff, has presided over a rollback in social gains and programs.

Temer's government is composed of right-wing ministers and seeks to implement a neoliberal program rejected repeatedly by Brazilians at the ballot box.

A bill, proposed by Temer and is currently before the lower house of Congress, proposes a 20-year freeze in government spending in social areas.

“The unelected Temer government offers Brazil an agenda that promotes job insecurity and opens the door to unbridled outsourcing … These actions will bring the country back to the eighteenth century and will bring an unprecedented period of setbacks,” said Adilson Araujo, head of the Workers Federation of Brazil.

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Sunday's rally and march was the latest in a series of public events called by social movements and supporters of the ousted president.

As in other protests, police used repression to try to intimidate demonstrators.

During last week's demonstration, military police fired teargas just as people began to disperse and demonstrators headed for metro entrances.

During this Sunday's protest, police attacked the crowd with batons after they chanted for the end of the notoriously violent military police.

“Military police are for war, not to protect the people,” said Senator Lindbergh Farias, who said he had moved a motion in Congress to dissolve the military police.

Another demonstration will be held Sunday and a general strike is set to take place on September 22.

“We will not leave the streets until we bring down this latest coup,” said Luiza Erundina, a federal lawmaker who is running for mayor of Sao Paulo.

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