Monday, June 10, 2024
ADVT 
International

Protests erupt in Sao Paulo ahead of World Cup kick-off

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Jun, 2014 11:05 AM
    Protestors in Sao Paulo clashed with the police in an anti-World Cup demonstration Thursday, hours before the city plays host to the tournament opener, a media report said.
     
    TV footage showed riot police using tear gas and rubber truncheons to disperse about 50 protesters near a Metro station on the route to the Arena Corinthians where the opening ceremony is set to take place, BBC reported Thursday.
     
    The violence happened about 13 km from the stadium, where Brazil will play Croatia at 20.00 GMT after the demonstrators refused to clear the road.
     
    At least one protester was arrested and a CNN journalist was injured in the clash.
     
    The demonstrators were chanting 'There won't be a Cup' against the excessive spending by the government on the tournament.
     
    Last year, more than a million people joined protests across the country to demand better public services and highlight corruption and the high cost of staging the World Cup, the BBC report said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Terror Strike at Karachi airport, 23 Dead including 10 Terrorists

    Terror Strike at Karachi airport, 23 Dead including 10 Terrorists
    The Pakistan Army spokesman has said the entire airport has been cleared and that all terrorists have been killed.

    Terror Strike at Karachi airport, 23 Dead including 10 Terrorists

    Four in 10 Americans believe God created earth 10,000 years ago

    Four in 10 Americans believe God created earth 10,000 years ago
     This may come as a shock to you but nearly 40 percent US citizens reject the evolution theory and believe that God created earth around 10,000 years ago.

    Four in 10 Americans believe God created earth 10,000 years ago

    Minimum Wage Cheats: British-Indian hotelier 'named and shamed' in UK

    Minimum Wage Cheats: British-Indian hotelier 'named and shamed' in UK
    Satwinder Singh Khatter and Tejinder Singh Khatter, owner of The Bath Hotel in Reading in Britain's Berkshire, neglected to pay 1,237.79 pounds (around $2081) to two of its workers, Evening Standard reported Sunday.

    Minimum Wage Cheats: British-Indian hotelier 'named and shamed' in UK

    Reward to solve MH370 mystery

    Reward to solve MH370 mystery
    Relatives of those on-board the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 have launched a fund-raising campaign to find information regarding the whereabouts of the aircraft, media reported Sunday.

    Reward to solve MH370 mystery

    Golden Temple Attack: Gandhi statue vandalised in Britain

    Golden Temple Attack: Gandhi statue vandalised in Britain
    Unidentified vandals have defaced the statue of Mahatma Gandhi in Britain's Leicester and engraved it with the slogans referring to anti-Sikh violence in India, a media report said.

    Golden Temple Attack: Gandhi statue vandalised in Britain

    US media discovers a 'new Fashion icon' in Narendra Modi

    US media discovers a 'new Fashion icon' in Narendra Modi
    From a persona non grata to a new fashion icon - that's how a stunning election victory has transformed Narendra Modi in the eyes of the American media as Washington prepares to welcome India's new prime minister, possibly in September.

    US media discovers a 'new Fashion icon' in Narendra Modi