Thousands rally in Brazil in defense of Petrobras
AFP
March 14, 2015 09:23 MYT
March 14, 2015 09:23 MYT
Tens of thousands of people demonstrated across Brazil on Friday in support of scandal-plagued state oil giant Petrobras and in defense of democracy, ahead of a weekend protest against President Dilma Rousseff.
Protesters hit the streets in 24 state capitals around the country, including a wet Sao Paulo, where organizers estimated 100,000 people marched in a defiant and colorful rally, as police kept a close watch.
Many wore the red of Rousseff's ruling Workers' Party.
"I am for Dilma, in defense of democracy, but I am also against corruption," Gerson Tadeu Conti, a doctor, 67, told AFP outside the headquarters of Petrobras, in Sao Paulo.
Nearly 150,000 people rallied around Brazil, said the Single Confederation of Workers (CUT). Police put the number at 32,000.
They were also demanding political and agrarian reform, and an end to corruption.
In Rio de Janeiro, a range of speakers -- student representatives, trade unionists, petroleum workers, bank employees -- all took turns to speak to the crowd from the top of a truck in the city center, before marching to a Petrobras office.
"I defend Petrobras because it's our heritage. But I also want politicians to be able to manage without corruption because it affects the image of our country," Rubens Pessanha, 50, an oil sector worker, told AFP.
Friday's protests mark the beginning of what promises to be a turbulent few days for the under pressure Rousseff, with growing calls for a major turn-out against her on Sunday.
Just months into a new term, her ruling coalition has been badly tainted by the graft scandal that has enveloped Petrobras, Brazil's biggest company and once a source of pride for many in the country.
Dozens of political figures -- some close allies of Rousseff -- and former Petrobras executives are under suspicion over a scheme facilitating corruption and money laundering that saw an estimated $3.8 billion creamed off inflated contracts over a decade.
Nobody has yet been convicted, but some of the alleged wrongdoing took place while Rousseff was chairwoman of the Petrobras board. She is not being investigated.