San Francisco Chronicle

Antigovern­ment demonstrat­ors call for leader’s ouster

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RIO DE JANEIRO — Tens of thousands of protesters returned to the streets of cities across Brazil on Sunday to express their ire against President Dilma Rousseff, reflecting a low ebb for her as she grapples with a colossal bribery scandal and a declining economy.

Still, the protests in some cities seemed to lack the urgency of huge demonstrat­ions earlier this year calling for the ouster of Rousseff, a leftist who won re-election just 10 months ago, suggesting tension may be easing on the president as congressio­nal and business leaders try to prevent a political crisis from intensifyi­ng.

The protest in Rio de Janeiro had something of a Carnivales­que feel to it; some demonstrat­ors wore bathing suits as they marched through the Copacabana district while trucks blared samba music. But vitriol also marked the event, with some calling on the military to take power.

“A military interventi­on may be illegal, but the people have to mobilize to make it legal,” said Rosangela Almeida, 53, an accountant, arguing that action must be taken to prevent Brazil from suffering the economic disarray of neighborin­g Venezuela.

Decades of dictatorsh­ip in Brazil left a legacy of hyperinfla­tion and human rights abuses, and political analysts consider the chances of the armed forces returning to power through a coup to be negligible. Still, rising polarizati­on is feeding fears that political infighting could prolong an economic slump.

Prosecutor­s are expected to make more revelation­s in the bribery scandal involving Petrobras, the government-controlled oil company. The economy is expected to shrink this year and next. Rousseff ’s approval ratings remain mired in the single digits.

She insists she will not resign, even as her opponents hold her responsibl­e for the scandal at Petrobras because it flourished while she was chair of the company’s board, before her election in 2010. She also faces legal challenges over whether her campaign received illicit contributi­ons.

 ?? Douglas Magno / AFP / Getty Images ?? A demonstrat­or bangs a pot on the likeness of President Dilma Rousseff in Belo Horizonte.
Douglas Magno / AFP / Getty Images A demonstrat­or bangs a pot on the likeness of President Dilma Rousseff in Belo Horizonte.

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