Rousseff to give address over unrest
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff is set to address the nation over the country's worst unrest in two decades after holding an emergency meeting.Containment or contagion?
21 June 2013 Last updated at 22:11 GMT
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff is set to address the nation over the country's worst unrest in two decades.
Earlier on Friday she held an emergency cabinet meeting to discuss how to end more than a week of protests.They began as demonstrations over transport fare rises in Sao Paulo, but quickly grew into nationwide rallies against corruption and other issue.
More than a million people are reported to have taken part in demonstrations on Thursday in about 100 cities.
In some cities, police used teargas and rubber bullets to disperse the crowds.
One man died when a car drove through a barricade in Sao Paulo state, and a woman died of a heart attack after collapsing during demonstrations in the northern city of Belem.
More protests are expected on Friday, and small numbers of people are already assembling in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo where some shops have closed for fear of further violence.
Pressure mounts President Rousseff initially praised the demonstrators, saying she was proud so many people were fighting for a better country.
But since then, she has sought to distance herself from the protests despite coming under mounting pressure to make a definitive statement on the issue.
Her cabinet meeting in the capital, Brasilia, ended after about two hours with no official comment, but she is to address the nation soon.
Her spokesman, Bruno Vanhoni, told the BBC that the protesters' demands were "things we in the government want too", and added that the government was trying to organise talks with protest leaders.
On Thursday night, demonstrators tried to storm the foreign ministry in Brasilia. They were driven back by police, who fired rubber bullets and tear gas.
In Rio de Janeiro, at least 29 people were reported injured after clashes between riot police and groups of masked young men trying to approach city hall.
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TV footage showed gangs looting
shops in the city centre - although many shopkeepers and banks had put
up wooden hoardings to protect their premises.
There were also clashes in the north-eastern city of
Salvador; in Porto Alegre, in the south; and in Campinas, north of Sao
Paulo. The protests, originally triggered by an increase in bus fares on 2 June, have since grown into a much wider movement.
Protesters are angry at corruption and poor public services, as well as the huge cost of next year's football World Cup, saying the government should also invest in education and healthcare.
Sao Paulo, Rio, Recife and Joao Pessoa are among the cities to have reversed the fare increases.
However, Sao Paulo Mayor Fernando Haddad warned that the move was a "big sacrifice", which meant investments would have to be cut.
Some of the protests have targeted the Confederations Cup, the eight-team tournament which is considered a dry run for next year's World Cup.
Demonstrators have expressed their anger at steep ticket prices and the money spent on both tournaments, as well as the 2016 Olympic Games, which Rio de Janeiro is hosting.
Football's world governing body, Fifa, has strongly rejected Brazilian media speculation that the Confederations Cup could be cancelled.
No matches are for scheduled for Friday. Play is due to resume on Saturday with Italy facing Brazil in Salvador and Japan playing Mexico in Belo Horizonte.
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