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  • The reality of Brazil's state as the World Cup looms over the country is a far cry

  • from the perfectly measured pitches

  • golden sands and incredible landmarks of Latin America

  • Death, corruption, poverty, violence,

  • drugs and prostitution run rife through the nation and its many slums

  • better known in Brazil as favelas

  • 600 thousand foreign tourists are expected to descend upon the nation 600

  • thousand people that Brazil has paid to accommodate. People that will come for

  • a month

  • and then leave but the effect on the local population has been

  • devastating and could last for years if you want to know the truth

  • about what's happening in Brazil you're in the right place I'm going to tackle

  • each section separately so here's your chance to pick and choose the area

  • you want to find out about

  • for those on mobiles and tablets I've stuck the timings in the description below

  • Prostitution is legal in Brazil

  • that may be shocking to hear for some but something even more shocking is

  • that in March 2013

  • Brazil's Higher Court of Justice ruled that adults having sex with a child is not

  • necessarily

  • considered a crime. Since 2009 the age of consent has been

  • 14 years old. Children as young as

  • 10-years-old are being forced to sell themselves on the street in order to make

  • money from fans coming over

  • if you saw kids on the street during a normal celebration it would be completely

  • innocent in Brazil it could mean something entirely different

  • In preparation for the World Cup the prostitutes in Brazil have been offered

  • an opportunity

  • the chance to learn English to entertain the foreign visitors

  • Igor Fuchs, a volunteer teacher says we teach basic expressions and also have

  • demonstrations with erotic paraphernalia

  • so they can learn the names, how to use them and how to propose them. Both women and

  • children are being exploited to squeeze money

  • out of the tourists.

  • Individuals in Brazil may be protesting their rights to basic amendments

  • a fair wage, public transport and security but as a collective

  • they also represent a fight for progression and to fix what the past has left behind

  • Rio alone has 763 favelas

  • which are home to 1.4 million people

  • 22 percent of the population. The poor living near the beaches, hotels and

  • shopping districts

  • have been chased back to the slums and many have lost their homes

  • to construction.

  • The Landless Workers' Movement marched the streets of Sao Paulo

  • against urban developments which have left many homeless.

  • An indigenous protest in Brasilia marched against the backdrop of the Mane Gurrincha

  • National Stadium

  • the most costly of them all. Protesting against the rise in real estate prices

  • and forcing lower-income families out of their homes.

  • Some could say the authorities are trying to sweep the dirt under the rug.

  • The people of Brazil deserve basic human rights meaning good health care,

  • education, food and sustainable living. The month-long tournament has brought wealth

  • to the nation

  • a wealth spent on constructing stadiums and giant state projects

  • which has bought only 0.2 percent

  • to add to Brazil's economic growth of this year.

  • Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has defended the $11 billion

  • dollar expenditure on the tournament but local residents say that the development

  • projects they were promised

  • have been delayed or were never spoken of again.

  • This graffiti in the Vila Flavia shantytown take center stage in showing the hardships of life

  • that people here are tired of seeing with the World Cup

  • as a backdrop.

  • The World Cup has brought the construction of many stadiums to host the matches.

  • This has left numerous unfinished infrastructure projects which will be

  • rushed to completion.

  • The way many Brazilians see it is giant state projects run by the government

  • full of injustice, lacking safety, being mismanaged

  • and halting any advancement in society. This safety and mismanagement

  • has led to death.

  • The death toll when this video was made stood at an estimated nine people.

  • A worker building the monorail in Sao Paulo died after construction collapsed,

  • one by electric shock, three fell to their deaths, 1 suffered injuries after

  • dismantling a crane

  • two died under a crane collapse and one died in a fire.

  • All these tragic deaths symbolize the danger that the workers face in trying to

  • complete the construction for the tournament. This statistic doesn't even

  • take into account the people killed in pacifying

  • the warring favelas. Brazil's murder rate has more than doubled over the

  • past three decades according to latest research.

  • Brazil slum are wracked

  • with violence. Widespread protests kicked off years ago and small scale demonstrations

  • continue.

  • A police unit to pacify urban areas and lower crime rates was launched

  • in 2008 which did work for a while with a 50 percent drop in homicide

  • rates in Brazil. That is until now.

  • Despite efforts by police to rid the favelas of crime before the tournament starts

  • it has had little impact.

  • President Rousseff has said the country is ready

  • but Metro worker strikes and demonstrations from Brazil's people

  • threatened to coincide with the beginning of the tournament.

  • Rousseff said, "there are people who claim the resources for the World Cup should've

  • been directed to health care and education

  • I hear and respect those opinions but I don't agree with them.

  • It is a false dilemma.

  • Protests have descended into rubbish fires and Molotov cocktails from the people.

  • Tear gas, rubber bullets and pepper spray from the police.

  • The anarchic group Black Bloc led an anti World Cup protest march in Sao Paulo on

  • May 24

  • They are linked with destroying banks, trashing public property

  • throwing petrol bombs and attacking police with stones and clubs.

  • People have resorted to violence against the vast sums of public money being spent

  • on the World Cup

  • as opposed to being used to ensure acceptable health care

  • education and housing. Nearly two billion has been spent on security alone

  • deploying a hundred

  • thousand police and fifty seven thousand troops although the place had initial

  • success

  • in evicting gangs from the slums the move has been criticized as just

  • displacing them elsewhere. With violence on the rise again in the pacified areas it

  • appears

  • drug traffickers are seeking to regain their lost territory.

  • According to Compassion International in Fortaleza that

  • approximate thirty-five thousand inhabitants earn less than the minimum

  • wage

  • of 223 dollars a month with families of up to 10

  • sharing less than 20 square meters in space.

  • All the children wnat is to be far from home so they quit studying and become an

  • easy target for the drug dealers

  • in order to maintain their addiction they simply go to the streets.

  • And where there are celebrations there are drugs and where do those drugs come from?

  • Drug traffickers. The First Capital Command cartel known as PCC in brazil threatened

  • to launch

  • the 'World Cup of Terror' as a powerful gang responsible for the murder of more than a

  • hundred up the city's police officers

  • this threat aims to show the Brazilian authorities how much control

  • the gangs have. The favelas are in conflict to who will be in charge of drugs demand

  • for the World Cup and the pacifying police are taking on the areas

  • one by one with many innocent being caught in the crossfire

  • According to reports they'll only be able to take back

  • forty of a thousand favelas by the time the World Cup starts

  • Soccer in Brazil was a turning point for those who didn't have much money

  • something accessible that's what it represented

  • The FIFA World Cup 2014 is the most expensive in history and

  • leaves many homeless, exploited or even

  • dead.

  • up

The reality of Brazil's state as the World Cup looms over the country is a far cry

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ワールドカップ2014のダークサイド - Truthloader (The Dark Side of the World Cup 2014 - Truthloader)

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    賴珮琪 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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