Protests as Brazil Stars arrive at World Cup camp
Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP
Dodging 200 striking teachers,
Brazil's World Cup squad headed for their tournament headquarters
Monday, seeking football glory against a backdrop of social tension at
the cost of staging the event.
"An educator is worth more
than Neymar" -- Brazil's star striker -- the teachers chanted as the
team bus headed from Rio de Janeiro's international airport towards the
squad's base about 90 kilometers (60 miles) away at Teresopolis in the
hills north of Rio.
Despite a heavy police
presence the demonstrators managed to hold up proceedings long enough to
plant anti-World Cup stickers on the vehicle before the bus finally
eased past the throng.
At the squad's Granja Comary
training complex, where they were met by more protests, coach Luiz
Felipe Scolari said his charges have what it takes to win the country's
sixth World Cup.
"We have a great mix (of
youth and experience). The young players have experience having played
at the top level in Europe," he told Globo television as he waited for
his squad to arrive.
Vanderlei Almeida/AFP
A helicopter of the Federal Police is seen at the Granja Comary training complex -- base of the Brazilian national football team -- in Teresopolis, 90 km from downtown Rio de Janeiro, on May 26, 2014
A helicopter of the Federal Police is seen at the Granja Comary training complex -- base of the Brazilian national football team -- in Teresopolis, 90 km from downtown Rio de Janeiro, on May 26, 2014
To ensure Brazil have the best
possible conditions in which to prepare, the Brazilian Football
Confederation earlier this year gave the training complex a
multimillion-dollar facelift.
The facilities include 39
individual rooms with king-size beds and several full-size pitches where
Scolari will prepare the team before they play the opening match of the
tournament against Croatia in Sao Paulo on June 12.
But such luxurious details have angered a populace demanding urgent investment in sagging infrastructure, health and education.
A small group of protesters
gathered outside the Granja Comary facility, where one banner read, in
English: "Billions for the FIFA World Cup, no housing for the victims of
the heavy rains (of) 2011. Do you think it is fair?"
Torrential rains claimed more than 900 lives in the Teresopolis region days after President Dilma Rousseff took office.
Rosangela Castro, a local
teacher, said: "It is a real scandal they spent more than 15 million
reais ($7 million) to refurbish this training center and billions on the
World Cup."
Police will stand guard 24 hours a day at Granja Comary to ward off any trouble.
Brazil has been hit by a
wave of strikes and protests ahead of the World Cup and elections in
October. Police, teachers, bank security guards and bus drivers have
staged disruptive strikes in recent weeks.
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