Oman Daily Observer

Brazil ends troop deployment after riots

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BRASÍLIA: Brazil’s President Michel Temer called troops back off the streets of the capital on Thursday after deploying them to guard government buildings following riots by protesters demanding he quit.

A decree published online in the official journal said the president had revoked an earlier measure to deploy 1,500 federal troops — a delicate issue in a country with living memory of a military dictatorsh­ip.

Soldiers shortly afterwards began to withdraw from around government buildings which they had spent the night guarding in Brasilia, an AFP reporter saw.

Protesters smashed their way into ministries and fought with riot police on Wednesday in some of the most violent scenes yet in a year of political turbulence.

The deployment of soldiers shocked a capital already shaken by the day’s violence and an investigat­ion into corruption allegation­s against the president.

Temer earlier insisted the deployment was carried out under the constituti­on. But the issue of troops is sensitive in a country that lived under military rule from 1964-1985.

Conservati­ve former vice-president Temer stepped up to replace leftist president Dilma Rousseff last year.

She was impeached for illegally manipulati­ng government accounts, but said the charges were politicall­y trumped-up. Now Temer faces impeachmen­t requests from his own political rivals.

Critics interprete­d the troop deployment as a sign of desperatio­n by a president under pressure.

Columnist Maria Cristina Fernandes in economic daily Valor described it as “the last chance for a show of authority by a government that is finished.”

Violence erupted on Wednesday after a crowd of demonstrat­ors, estimated by police at 35,000, marched towards the presidenti­al palace, which is flanked by Congress and the government buildings.

Most of the protesters were peaceful but small groups wearing masks threw stones at police and smashed their way into the agricultur­e ministry and reportedly also the culture and planning ministries.

Riot police crouching behind black shields lobbed tear gas and stun grenades into the crowd.

 ?? — AFP ?? A protester stands in front of a line of riot police during the protest “Occupy Brasilia” against the labour and social security reforms and the government of President Michel Temer in Brasilia.
— AFP A protester stands in front of a line of riot police during the protest “Occupy Brasilia” against the labour and social security reforms and the government of President Michel Temer in Brasilia.

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