
Audio By Carbonatix
Host's sports minister says airports and bus stations will be safe and that the police will containing disorder with the use of rubber bullets if necessary.
Brazil’s sports minister attempted to allay fears of violence harming next summer’s World Cup by saying that the authorities were working hard “to contain this violence”, that the main areas where fans congregated would be safe, and that other countries also suffered from violence.
”The issue of violence, we know it exists,’’ acknowledged Aldo Rebelo. “We do not have the same safety conditions on the streets as in European cities. But the airports, bus stations and subways will be safer than any other environment in the US or Europe.
“Sometimes we have specific vulnerabilities and demonstrations of violence but it is not just Brazil - we live in a world full of problems. The only time I was robbed was at an airport in Paris. The president of the Olympic Public Authority was robbed in front of a hotel in London. It seems that violence is only supposed to happen in Rio, Sao Paulo and Salvador.
“We do have cases of violence in our cities, violence with social origins, common crime, robberies. This is a horrible fact. We are trying to contain this violence. We know our country may be harmed when this violence is seen by the world - as would any country where violence exists.”
The focus on the potential negatives of the 2014 World Cup will slightly switch when the group-stage draw takes place here on Friday. Then the talk will be of the players, of where Neymar, Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Franck Ribéry, Mesut Özil and Wayne Rooney will be parading their skills.
Latest Stories
-
Congress passes war powers measure for first time, rebuking Trump’s war with Iran
52 minutes -
World Cup: Iran’s US entry terms changed for final group game
1 hour -
Spence appears not to shake hands with Partey
1 hour -
Trump to attend World Cup final and present trophy
1 hour -
A/R: Police bust suspected human trafficking ring, arrest 186 including 100 foreign nationals
2 hours -
World Cup: Should Ghana have been awarded a penalty against England?
2 hours -
Deschamps returns to France after death of his mother
2 hours -
Kunal Shah: The Indian entrepreneur taking charge of WhatsApp
2 hours -
Hundreds of schools in UK plan closures ahead of red heat alerts
2 hours -
Spider which uses spring trap to capture prey discovered in Australia
2 hours -
Tech stocks tumble on concerns over AI spending
3 hours -
US top court says Rastafarian man cannot sue prison guards who cut his dreadlocks
3 hours -
Germany rail network comes to complete halt nationwide due to IT malfunction
3 hours -
2026 World Cup: ‘They were very compact’ – Rice salutes Ghana after England stalemate
3 hours -
Google’s YouTube settles social media addiction case with teen
3 hours