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Brazil’s electoral censorship tracked by Knight Center blog

September 30th, 2010

The Knight Center’s blog “Journalism in the Americas” features a new map pinpointing the instances of media censorship in Brazil that have occurred in the weeks leading up to the Oct. 3 elections for president, all 27 governors, and members of federal and state legislatures. Journalists are invited to consult the map as they prepare to cover the election.

The map by Knight Center blogger Maíra Magro illustrates how journalists and media have experienced acts of censorship in at least nine states in each of Brazil’s five main regions: the north, northeast, central west, southeast, and south. It was inspired by a similar map prepared by Brazilian journalist Marcelo Soares during elections in 2008.

Magro’s map specifically tracks judicial decisions, legislation, and acts by government institutions that have prohibited journalists and media from reporting without restrictions on the campaign. The censorship has taken various forms. In the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, for example, police confiscated 850 copies of the weekly newspaper Impacto Campo Grande for criticizing the state’s governor, who is running for reelection. Also in the state, a journalist was banned from publishing news about a senator who accused the journalist of attacking his honor.

In the northeastern state of Paraíba, the map reveals eight acts of censorship, including several in which politicians successfully obtained court orders to ban local media from publishing information about them.

The map is the first in a series of original content that will be produced by the Knight Center’s blogs in English, Spanish, and Portuguese.

By Dean Graber

http://knightcenter.utexas.edu

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Rousseff Opens Up 23-Point Lead in Brazil Presidential Poll

September 29th, 2010

Dilma Rousseff

Dilma Rousseff, the chosen successor of Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, opened up a 23-point lead over rival candidate Jose Serra less than a week before the election, according to Ibope opinion poll released today.

Support for former Cabinet chief Rousseff rose to 50 percent of those surveyed in the Ibope poll conducted Sept. 25- 27 for the National Industrial Confederation, or CNI, up from 38 percent in the previous poll taken in June.

The nationwide poll of 3,010 people was taken Sept. 25-27 and has a margin of error of 2 percentage points.

Former Sao Paulo Governor Jose Serra, of the opposition Social Democracy Party, had 27 percent, down from 32 percent in June. Backing for Green Party candidate Marina Silva rose to 13 percent from 7 percent. (more…)

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Clogged roads and ports harm Brazil’s development plans

September 29th, 2010

The port of Santos

There is sugar everywhere at one of the terminals in Santos, Brazil‘s biggest port.

It drips from the high conveyor belts that carry loads from the warehouses to the ships, making piles that resemble week-old snow.

The ground is coated with a dark syrup while the air is full of the sweet and slightly sickly smell of a bakery in the morning.

The rhythm of work is frantic with ships being loaded 24 hours a day amid record exports of sugar.

The long queues of vessels waiting off the coast of Santos for a berth in Brazil’s biggest port are a visible sign of the country’s booming economy but also highlight the strains economic growth has placed on its infrastructure.

“This is a country that exported $100bn (£63bn) in 2005 and $200bn in 2008. We need very quick and large investment in infrastructure,” says Weber Bahal from Brazil’s development ministry.

Under President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, investing in infrastructure has been at the heart of what is known as the growth acceleration programme (PAC) launched in 2007. A further $500bn is earmarked for investment over the next five years, says Mr Behal.

Lula has described his preferred successor, Dilma Rousseff, as the “mother of the PAC”. She is well ahead of her main rival, Jose Serra, in the 3 October presidential election, according to opinion polls. (more…)

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Lula’s ‘Bolsa Familia’ a vote-winner in Brazil

September 28th, 2010

AFP/File – A mother of four shows her "Bolsa Familia" social plan card

If, as expected, Brazil‘s ruling party’s presidential candidate Dilma Rousseff sweeps the October 3 election, it will be in no small part due to the “Bolsa Familia” welfare handouts to her country’s poor. The initiative, launched by outgoing Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, is seen as the leading wealth redistribution program in the world — going some way to redressing Brazil’s massive income disparity.

Because the Bolsa Familia helps 46 million people out of a national population of 193 million — nearly one person in four — it also serves as a formidable vote-winner. Adalgiza da Silva, 50, has always lived in Rio de Janeiro’s biggest shantytown of Rocinha. Under Lula, she has seen her quality of life improve greatly. And, like the majority of her neighbors, she will vote for “continuity” — which means Rousseff. “We are poor, and they have given us dignity, a chance to stand eye-to-eye with the rich,” she said.

“That is why I’ll vote for the continuity with Lula, for his candidate Dilma (Rousseff). Even better that she’s a woman.” Between 2003 and 2009, under Lula’s watch, 29 million Brazilians have been lifted out of poverty into the middle class, which now accounts for more than half the national population. Much of the credit goes to the Bolsa Familia, though other government programs and subsidies have also been created, including a children’s sporting stadium in Rocinha and scholarships allowing slum residents to get into university.

“Fewer children and youths loiter in the streets. Now they have a different choice in life than wearing gold chain necklaces, carrying a gun or dying early,” Adalgiza da Silva said, making allusion to the drug-gang careers rife in the slums. A neighbor, Luiz Alberto, has 10 children, five of whom still live with him. In exchange for the Bolsa Familia hand-out he receives, he has to ensure they are vaccinated and go to school. He, too, will vote for Rousseff. (more…)

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Iran to play Brazil next week in UAE

September 28th, 2010

Iran’s national football team play a friendly game against five-time world champions Brazil next week in the United Arab Emirates, ISNA news agency reported Monday.

A spokesman of the Iranian Football Federation (FFI) told ISNA that the friendly will take place on October 6 or 7 in Abu Dhabi.

Abbad Torabian said that Brazil have committed to playing a strong team and claimed that Iran paid no money to the Brazilians for the game.

He did not say why the game is set to be held in the UAE and not in Iran.

Due to political problems and especially because of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s controversial remarks about Israel and the Holocaust, the FFI has had problems in the last five years finding suitable national teams ready to play friendlies against Iran. (more…)

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