News   /   Brazil

Brazil riot police fire tear gas at protesting teachers

An image grab from a video released by Ruptly shows Brazilian police firing tear gas at protesting teachers in Sao Paulo on March 14, 2018.

Brazilian riot police have fired tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse public school teachers protesting against proposed changes to their pension plans.

The violence erupted in the major Brazilian city of Sao Paulo on Wednesday after teachers started chanting anti-government slogans in front of the city hall.

The teachers had gathered in front of Sao Paulo’s City Council as negotiations were underway to raise civil servants’ monthly pension contributions from 11 percent to at least 14 percent.

The clashes reportedly began when only some of the striking teachers were allowed inside the city hall and those left outside shattered the windows before police intervention.

An image grab from a video released by Ruptly shows Brazilian teachers protesting against a controversial social security project in Sao Paulo on March 14, 2018.

The municipal educators have been on strike since March 8, denouncing the proposed reforms. Other changes to the pension plan also included the creation of a supplementary rate that could take the tax rate even higher.

Sao Paulo’s Education Department said that teachers at 93 percent of the 1,550 schools administered by the city government were on strike.

The number of teachers on strike and the number of students affected by the walkout was not immediately available.

People have been staging crippling protests in various Brazilian cities over the past year, demanding a halt to the government’s austerity measures.

President Michel Temer took over in 2016 after the impeachment of leftist President Dilma Rousseff, who was found guilty of doctoring financial government accounts. He has promised to revive the economy after two years of recession, but his center-right government is no more popular than Rousseff’s.


Press TV’s website can also be accessed at the following alternate addresses:

www.presstv.co.uk

SHARE THIS ARTICLE
Press TV News Roku