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Judi Lynn

(160,527 posts)
Tue Apr 1, 2014, 04:38 PM Apr 2014

Brazil: Fight breaks out during Congress session

Source: Associated Press

Brazil: Fight breaks out during Congress session
8:05 AM Wednesday Apr 2, 2014

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) A fight in Brazil's Congress has forced suspension of a session marking the 50th anniversary of the military coup that ushered in a dictatorship that lasted more than two decades.

Television channels broadcast images of pandemonium in the House of Representatives as supporters and opponents of the 1964 coup faced off. The fight broke out among members of the public attending the session.

The G1 internet portal of the Globo television network ran images of two women attacking one another as security personnel attempted to separate them.

G1 said the lawmaker presiding over Tuesday's session suspended it several times in an effort to restore order before definitively suspending it.

Read more: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=11230676

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Brazil: Fight breaks out during Congress session (Original Post) Judi Lynn Apr 2014 OP
As Brazil marks 50th anniversary of the coup, more people open up about the dictatorship Judi Lynn Apr 2014 #1

Judi Lynn

(160,527 posts)
1. As Brazil marks 50th anniversary of the coup, more people open up about the dictatorship
Tue Apr 1, 2014, 04:44 PM
Apr 2014

As Brazil marks 50th anniversary of the coup, more people open up about the dictatorship
By Dom Phillips, Published: March 31, 2014

RIO DE JANEIRO — Under a 1979 amnesty law, no one has ever been tried for the human rights abuses committed during Brazil’s dictatorship. Although some victims have spoken about the horrors of that dark time, it seemed many Brazilians preferred to forget.
But as the country marks the 50th anniversary this week of the coup that brought the military to power, the dictatorship is at the center of a national debate about what happened and what it means today.

At a news conference Monday in Brasilia, the capital, President Dilma Rousseff remembered the victims of the coup, the BBC reported. “Our present day requires that we remember and speak about what happened. We owe this to those who died and disappeared, owe it to those who were tortured and persecuted, owe it to their families,” the BBC quoted her as saying.

Separately, Justice Minister José Ed­uardo Cardozo issued an official apology to the victims of the military government, the BBC said.

Rousseff, a former member of a left-wing guerrilla group, was among those imprisoned and tortured. She has never spoken publicly about the details of her experience.

More:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/as-brazil-marks-50th-anniversary-of-the-coup-more-people-open-up-about-the-dictatorship/2014/03/30/ea259678-b6ae-11e3-8cc3-d4bf596577eb_story.html

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