Tag: Brazil

  • Neymar to pay $3.3m for having lake in his mansion

    Neymar to pay $3.3m for having lake in his mansion

    Paris Saint-Germain football star, Neymar has been slapped with a hefty fine of 16 million reais (£2.6m/$3.3m) for constructing a lake at his mansion in Brazil.

    WHAT HAPPENED?

    On June 22, it came to light that the 31-year-old was being investigated by the local council in Mangaratiba, a coastal town near Rio de Janeiro, for various “irregularities” in a grand construction project.

    Construction work was halted at that time, and Neymar is now facing the consequences for not adhering to planning regulations and carrying out building activities without the necessary permits.

    WHAT THEY SAID

    The council issued a statement regarding the matter, stating that four fines have been imposed for “environmental violations in the construction of an artificial lake at the player’s mansion.” It further highlighted that numerous infractions had been identified, including Neymar undertaking “environmentally regulated work without authorization,” as well as unauthorized land excavation, vegetation removal, and alteration of water sources without proper documentation.

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Neymar has faced criticism through social media posts, with his mansion site being cordoned off and construction work coming to a halt. Despite this, reports suggest that he has still visited the site and even hosted a party, but repercussions are now being enforced.

    WHAT NEXT?

    Neymar, who has been out of action for PSG since February due to ankle surgery, acquired the property in question in 2016.

    The mansion, boasting amenities like a spa and helipad, reportedly sits on a vast 10,000 square metre plot.

  • Vinicius Junior inaugurate sports centre at his alma mater in Brazil

    Vinicius Junior inaugurate sports centre at his alma mater in Brazil

    Vinicius Junior, the forward for Real Madrid, has inaugurated a sports center named after him at the school where his journey to success began.

    The 22-year-old returned to his hometown of Sao Goncalo in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and visited his alma mater, Odete Sao Paio School.

    During the opening ceremony, Vinicius unveiled the Vinicius Sports Centre, a sports pitch that now bears his name, showcasing his connection to his roots.

    The event was highlighted by a friendly match between former and current students of the school, which was streamed live on the school’s social media platforms.

    “Vinicius studied with us during his childhood and adolescence,” a statement from the school read.

    “He was always an exemplary pupil and showed his dedication both in the classroom and on the pitch.

    “Very early on he showed his passion for football and, with a lot of hard work, determination and the support of his family, he made it to the top of international football.

    “May Vinicius’ visit serve as an inspiration for all our students and may we continue to encourage the development of talent in our school, whether in sport, art, science or any other area.”

    Vinicius Junior, sports centre, Odete Sao Paio School
    Vinicius Junior in action with some students of the school. Credit: @odetesaopaiooficial
    Source: Instagram
    Vini told to change hairstyle

    Meanwhile, Vinicius Junior’s latest hairstyle has sparked lively discussions among football enthusiasts, becoming a focal point of attention, per reports.

    The Real Madrid winger made a bold change during the off-season, transitioning from his previous Mohawk-like hairstyle to eye-catching dreadlocks, which has generated significant buzz across the internet.

    It is his new haircut that has captured the imagination of fans, with many expressing their opinions that he should consider reverting to his signature hairstyle.

    Vinicius rocks exquisite Louis Vuitton

    There were earlier reports on Vinicius Junior unwinding in style in the off-season, following the conclusion of a busy 2022/23 campaign, participating in exhibition games and attending various events.

    Stepping out in style recently, the Brazilian winger adorned himself with a lavish Louis Vuitton outfit, sporting a round T-shirt paired with a sleek black jacket as he exuded a fashion-forward presence.

  • Ronaldinho celebrates 21st anniversary of Brazil’s victory in the 2002 FIFA World Cup

    Ronaldinho celebrates 21st anniversary of Brazil’s victory in the 2002 FIFA World Cup

    Exactly 21 years have passed since Brazil secured their fifth World Cup victory in 2002, hosted by Japan and South Korea.

    In the final, they emerged triumphant with a 2-0 victory over Germany, courtesy of a remarkable brace by Ronaldo.

    Reflecting on that historic day, Ronaldinho, who left a lasting impact on the tournament, reminisced about the achievement.

    After winning the World Cup in 1994, Brazil experienced a painful defeat in the 1998 final against France, where they were beaten 3-0.

    Determined to rectify their previous disappointment, they entered the 2002 tournament with a strong desire for redemption, and they accomplished it in sensational fashion.

    Drawn in a relatively straightforward group with Turkey, Costa Rica, and China, Brazil comfortably won all their group stage matches.

    The doubts that surrounded the team before the tournament had vanished, and they appeared unbeatable.

    Advancing to the knockout stages, they overcame Belgium with ease in the Round of 16. In the quarterfinals, Ronaldinho’s iconic free-kick secured a hard-fought 2-1 victory for Brazil.

    They then defeated Turkey 1-0 in the semifinals before sealing their triumph with a 2-0 win over Germany in the final.

    Ronaldo played a pivotal role as Brazil’s talisman, scoring eight goals throughout the tournament and earning the prestigious Golden Boot award.

    Ronaldinho remembers 2002 World Cup win

    Ronaldinho took to Twitter to remember one of the greatest nights of their career. He scored two goals in the tournament, per Transfermarkt.

    “06/30/02 day I became world champion! A special moment for all of us Brazilians…” he wrote. Many thanks to everyone in this group who gave their all to achieve this dream. We are in history!!!”

  • Madrid star shares insight on potential influence Carlo Ancelotti could have on Brazilian football

    Madrid star shares insight on potential influence Carlo Ancelotti could have on Brazilian football

    Speculation surrounding Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti has been ongoing since late December, with Brazil’s Football Confederation expressing their strong desire for him to replace Tite as their national team coach.

    Ancelotti seems likely to fulfill his contract with Real Madrid, which is set to expire in the summer of 2024. Even some of his own players have been discussing his potential move to Brazil.

    Recent reports suggested that Ancelotti had reached an agreement to assume the role of Brazil’s coach in the summer of 2024. However, these reports were denied by Real Madrid.

    Speaking to Marca, Real Madrid forward Rodrygo Goes admitted that he would be happy for Ancelotti to come with him on international breaks.

    “I can’t talk much because I don’t know much either. I know he’s plan A for the national team.

    “The president is counting on him and we also want him there.

    “For me, for Vini, for Militao we know him and we know of his greatness.

    “Having him in the national team is going to be very important, but there is still nothing confirmed.

    “We hope that when his contract ends, he will come to the national team.”

    Neymar confirms Ancelotti’s Brazil move

    “We will have the opportunity to have a foreign coach.

    Ancelotti has won everything and I’m sure he’s going to teach us a lot.”

    It appears there is a groundswell of approval for Ancelotti in Brazil, with players, fans, and presidents all keen to have him join.

    With his contract at Real Madrid winding down in 2024, avoiding the temptation of Brazil would be a tough ask for Ancelotti.

    Real Madrid’s Ancelotti’s replacement shortlist

    Sports Brief earlier reported Real Madrid president Florentino Perez has drawn up a provisional three-man shortlist to replace Ancelotti, consisting of Zinedine Zidane, Jose Mourinho, and Xabi Alonso.

    Both Zidane and Mourinho have previously had stints at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium dugout and have produced remarkable results for the Spanish capital club.

    Despite this, Mundo Deportivo has reported that Alonso is Perez’s preferred candidate. Coincidentally, his contract with Bayer Leverkusen expires at the end of next season – which could allow Real Madrid to poach him for nothing.

  • Brazil allegedly mull over hiring Ancelotti’s son as coach – Reports

    Brazil allegedly mull over hiring Ancelotti’s son as coach – Reports

    Sources have informed ESPN that the Brazilian Football Association (CBF) is contemplating the appointment of Davide Ancelotti, son of Carlo Ancelotti, to a coaching position within the national team.

    This move is seen as a transitional step while they await the official appointment of Carlo Ancelotti himself in June 2024.

    CBF president Ednaldo Rodrigues has consistently expressed his preference for Ancelotti to take charge of the Brazilian team after the departure of Tite following the 2022 World Cup.

    However, Ancelotti, who is currently the manager of Real Madrid, has stated his intention to fulfill his contract at the Bernabeu, which has one more year remaining.

    Sources told ESPN Brazil the CBF are looking at how best to handle the interim period, with one option being appointing Davide Ancelotti — who is serving as his father’s assistant at Madrid — to work with Brazil interim manager Ramon Menezes in the meantime.

    Sources close to Ancelotti told ESPN they would not rule out the Italian taking charge of Brazil in June 2024, when his Madrid contract expires.

    A meeting to discuss the situation is due to take place at the end of this month.

    Davide Ancelotti, 33, first became his father’s assistant at Bayern Munich in 2016, and has since worked as his right-hand man at Napoli, Everton and now Madrid, where he is highly rated.

    Brazil have already played friendlies with Morocco and Guinea — winning 4-1 in Barcelona on Saturday — since the World Cup and will face Senegal on Tuesday.

    They are due to play six World Cup qualifying matches between September and November 2023, followed by a break until September 2024.

    Plans have also been announced for a friendly with Spain in March 2024 — which RFEF president Luis Rubiales has said will take place at the Bernabeu — as part of an anti-racism campaign over the abuse faced by Brazil and Madrid forward Vinicius Junior.

    The Copa America is due to take place between June and July 2024, in the United States.

    Carlo Ancelotti has coached clubs including Juventus, AC Milan, Chelsea, Paris Saint-Germain and Madrid in a 28-year managerial career — becoming the only coach to win four Champions Leagues — but has never taken charge of a national team.

  • President Lula of Brazil intends to visit Africa twice

    President Lula of Brazil intends to visit Africa twice

    The Brazilian leader will in August commence visiting eight African countries onwards with the aim of strengthening political and economic ties on the continent.

    Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva plans to make these two visits to strengthen economic and political relations with the continent, according to official sources.

    Angola, Mozambique, Senegal, Ghana, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Sao Tomé & Principe are among the countries that the Brazilian leader is expected to visit.

    His first tour is expected to coincide with the BRICS Summit of Heads of State and Government scheduled for August in South Africa, while the second could take place on the sidelines of the next African Union Summit, to be held in February 2024.

    Brazil also plans to reopen its embassy in Sierra Leone and set up diplomatic representation in Rwanda.

    Developing trade

    It is clear that Brazil wants to expand its economic cooperation with the continent in line with President Lula da Silva’s South-South integration strategy.

    During Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s previous terms in office, Brazil stepped up its relations with the continent. As a result, trade between the two sides increased sevenfold in a decade, from $4.2 billion in 2002 to $28.4 billion in 2012.

    But the rapprochement between Africa and Brazil has taken a turn for the worse. The economic and political crisis that shook the Latin American country from 2014 onwards is no stranger to this.

    Trade between the two parties has plummeted. In 2022, it was limited to 21.3 billion dollars, practically the same level as in 2010.
  • Indigenous Brazilians protest as lawmakers limit ancestral land recognition

    Indigenous Brazilians protest as lawmakers limit ancestral land recognition

    Tuesday night, over objections from Indigenous organisations, Brazil‘s lower house of Congress passed a law that would restrict the acknowledgment of ancestral territories.

    The PL 490/2007 bill would diminish the control that the environment and Indigenous peoples ministries now have over environmental regulations and the delineation of Indigenous territories by removing some of their authority.

    The proposed law, which was approved by a vote of 283 to 155, still needs the Senate’s and President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s assent.

    Ahead of the vote, Indigenous groups blocked a highway just outside the country’s largest city Sao Paulo. Protesters burned tires, fired arrows and threw objects at the riot and military police, who used water cannons and tear gas in return.

    Indigenous groups from across the country also planned protests in the capital Brasilia, where Lula da Silva is meeting with South American leaders.

    The president could still veto the bill, Reuters reports, but Congress could have enough support to override the move.

    “PL490 has been approved by the Chamber: a serious attack on indigenous peoples and the environment,” Sônia Guajajara, the Indigenous Peoples minister, tweeted late on Tuesday.

    “We keep fighting for life. Still in the Senate, we will dialogue to avoid negotiating our lives in exchange for profit and destruction. We will not give up!.”

    Lula da Silva has promised to repair the damage to the Amazon caused during the tenure of his predecessor, Jair Bolsonaro. A surge in invasions and illegal extraction of natural resources in protected Indigenous lands were reported under the far-right former leader’s time in office.

    Last month, Lula da Silva recognized six Indigenous territories, Reuters reports, fulfilling part of his campaign promise to protect Indigenous lands from being taken for farming, gold mining and logging in the Amazon.

    But Lula da Silva has had to face a hostile Congress, which approved expediting the bill’s review process last week.

    While the bill does not impact fully recognized Indigenous territories, it would affect territories that are under claim.

    Rights groups warn that the bill would “prevent Indigenous communities from obtaining title of their lands if they were not physically present on them on October 5, 1988, the day Brazil’s current Constitution was adopted,” writes Human Rights Watch.

    “Indigenous peoples who were expelled from their territory before October 1988 and cannot prove they were involved in an ongoing dispute over their claim on that date would not be able to secure legal recognition of their lands,” Human Rights Watch wrote in a statement.

    “Choosing an arbitrary cutoff date and refusing to recognize ancestral lands claimed after that date is not in line with international standards,” it added.

    If the bill passes, it could tarnish Lula da Silva’s climate ambitions. “If Lula loses this battle in Congress, it will represent yet another political defeat for his administration and display the conservative force he faces,” Bruna Santos, director of the Wilson Center’s Brazil Institute, told CNN.

  • Actor Jefferson Machado buried

    Actor Jefferson Machado buried

    Actor Jefferson Machado who went missing over five months ago and was reported dead on May 5, 2023 has been buried.

    The actor’s passing was confirmed on his Instagram page by family friend Cintia Hilsendeger.

    “It is with great regret that we inform you that Jeff was found dead on 05/22/2023,” she wrote in the heartbreaking post.

    Authorities said that the body of the 44-year-old was discovered bound and stuffed inside a wooden chest, which had been encased in concrete and buried 6 feet beneath the backyard of a house in the Campo Grande neighborhood, G1 reported.

    “He had his arms tied behind his head and buried in a trunk that is very similar to the ones in his own house,” the family’s lawyer Jairo Magalhães said in a statement, per R7 News.

    Authorities exhume the chest that Machado was buried in.

    The attorney said that the corpse, which was identified using fingerprints, had a “line” on the neck, indicating that he was strangled.

    Police footage showed the trunk getting exhumed — a task that reportedly took nine people to accomplish, the Daily Mail reported.

    While the probe is ongoing, police are currently investigating a man who had rented the property. The unidentified suspect, who reportedly knew Machado, was last seen entering the house around a month ago.

    “Jefferson was coldly and brutally murdered by envious, evil and, of course, unscrupulous people,” family friend Hilsendeger wrote on the actor’s Instagram account.

    This marks the end of a long and tragic saga that began after the Rio native vanished in January with police reporting that he’d last been spotted in Campo Grande.

    Machado’s family learned of his disappearance after a non-governmental agency contacted them to inform them that his eight dogs had been abandoned at the house.

    During the ensuing months, the family received text messages from someone they believed to be impersonating the actor.

    Machado’s mother Maria das Dores said she found the correspondence suspicious as it was rife with spelling errors and didn’t sound like her son.

    She’d also stopped receiving calls from him, which the alleged impersonator claimed was because he “dropped his cellphone in the toilet,” Dores claimed.

    The family became increasingly concerned after noticing that Machado’s cloud password had changed and that his location-tracking function had been disabled.

    Born in Araranguá, Machado started studying to be an actor in 1997.

    He notably starred in the 2021 film, “Placebo Effect (Efeito Placibo),” which he also co-wrote. In his final role before his death, Machado played a Philistine on the 2022 telenovela “Reis.”

  • Baby’s head continues to grow due to medical condition

    Baby’s head continues to grow due to medical condition

    A mother claims that her kid is “beautiful” despite the insults people have hurled at her because of a medical problem that causes the baby’s head to keep growing.

    Adalgisa Soares Alves of Brazil realised something wasn’t right when she became pregnant with Graziely Alves Régis because she experienced excruciating abdominal discomfort.

    Graziely was diagnosed with hydrocephalus, a buildup of fluid on the brain that put pressure on her skull and caused damage, when she was eight months pregnant, according to the doctors.

    Due to the condition, Graziely’s head was larger than average when she was born and continues to grow despite multiple operations.

    She was given three months to live by doctors but Graziely has defied expectations and despite losing her sight, being bedbound and unable to talk, she is still alive aged 29.

    Now Adalgisa, 48, says her daughter has been dubbed the ‘giant baby’ and decided to share Graziely’s daily struggles on social media.

    ‘I don’t think it’s cruel because “baby” is an affectionate word, but when they call out her “big head” I feel sad,’ the mum told NeedToKnow.co.uk.

    ‘Because then that is just being cruel.

    graziely and her mum
    Graziely was only given three months to live by doctors (Picture: Jam Press / Instagram @adalgisasoaresalves)
    graziely and her mum
    She has a medical condition called hydrocephalus (Picture: Jam Press / Instagram @adalgisasoaresalves)
    graziely and her mum
    Adalgisa hit out at the online trolls who call her daughter names (Picture: Jam Press / Instagram @adalgisasoaresalves)

    ‘But the important thing is that me, and all our family and friends, love Graziely the way she is.’

    The mum said nothing could be done to help her daughter before or immediately after she was born.

    She said: ‘Every day I take care of her, bathe her and feed her with all my love.

    ‘I’m dedicated to Graziely and it makes me happy to see her well cared for, from me and all of our family.

    ‘Nephews, cousins, aunties and many more family members love to come and see her and care for her.

    ‘I don’t work, I just take care of her — I’m happy to take care of her and it is rewarding when I see her smile.

    graziely
    She is now bed bound, has lost her sight and is unable to talk (Picture: Jam Press / Instagram @adalgisasoaresalves)

    ‘I never lose hope because I am a woman of great faith and I always put God above everything — I pray a lot every day.’

    Graziely’s day begins at 7am with a homemade papaya smoothie followed by soup and a clean at 11am, and again at 6pm.

    Graziely uses 30 packs of nappies, costing 75 reais (£12.20) per pack, with around 2,250 reais (£366) being spent on the essential per month.

    The family rely on BPC payments, a non-contributory pension scheme available to those unable to work due to disability.

    People across social media have supported Adalgisa and Graziely with Sarah commenting: ‘This lady is an awesome mum,’ and another person said: ‘God bless you so much.’

    Adalgisa added: ‘I always hope that she will live [for] many years.

    ‘She transmits positive energy and I feel a peace that overflows when someone visits her.

    ‘I will always give her the best because she was born from my womb, she was very much loved and desired inside my belly and I will love her until the last day of her life.’

  • Man Utd leads race in Neymar transfer

    Man Utd leads race in Neymar transfer

    It is reported that PSG’s willingness to listen to offers for Neymar especially one’s from clubs like Man Utd as the club aims to reduce their wage bill, which has been inflated by the high salaries of their star players.

    Additionally, Manchester United is not the only club interested in signing Neymar, as there have been rumors of a potential return to Barcelona or a move to Real Madrid.

    However, if Sheikh Jassim’s takeover bid for Manchester United is successful, it is expected that the club will have significant financial resources to make a competitive offer for Neymar’s signature.

    Man Utd’s chances of signing Neymar have received a huge boost

    And it has emerged that PSG are planning for life without both the Brazilian and Lionel Messi.

    Messi has been suspended for two weeks after defying club chiefs’ wishes and flying for a promotional tour to Saudi Arabia.

    That was seen as a blatant move to alienate the club and fans, after his initial love affair in Paris has degenerated to more of a marriage of convenience.

    PSG bosses have been working on a future blueprint over the past few months, which it is envisaged will mean a wholesale change in policy.

    One club source explained: “From now on, the plan for PSG is simple – young, French and team players.

    “It’s obvious to anyone who that applies to and who it doesn’t.”

    PSG’s previous masterplan was to use the attacking trident of Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe to conquer Europe and win the Champions League for the first time.

    But the Ligue 1 champions have fallen short with last 16 exits – at the hands of Real Madrid and Bayern Munich – for two straight seasons.

    Messi, out of contract at the end of this campaign, will not be offered a new deal – although his hopes of a return to Barcelona depend on the catalan giants reaching a financial agreement with La Liga bosses.

    And while PSG will not boot Neymar out of the door, it is understood that they will be willing to listen to serious offers if they come this summer.

    That is the opportunity for United to pounce if they think Neymar is the jigsaw piece that can take them back into the title equation and a genuine Champions League run.

    Neymar, who moved to Ligue 1 in a £198m deal from Barcelona in 2017, has two years left on his current PSG contract.

    But it is understood the South American, on a staggering £490,000 per WEEK, would be keen on a move to the Prem.

    Mbappe’s future has been clouded in uncertainty over the past 18 months, with Real Madrid desperate to land him.

    But while his attitude to team-mates has seen heads being shaken at times, he is 24, the emblem of France and also a player who will give everything to win on the pitch.

    A departure of the two South American stars would also leave Mbappe unchallenged as the “King of Paris” and the stand-out star in Ligue 1.

    Neymar’s girlfriend announces pregnancy

    In more positive news, Sports Brief reported on Neymar becoming a father again after his girlfriend, Bruna Biancardi’s recent pregnancy announcement.

    The model tagged the 31-year-old Paris Saint-Germain superstar in a post on social media(Instagram), where she announced the positive news to her 3.8 million followers.

    The couple shared a series of snaps highlighting Biancardi’s visibly growing baby bump, and in one of the photos, Neymar holds his girlfriend’s belly with a smile.

    The news was reported by Sports Brief and announced by Biancardi herself on social media.

    Neymar and his girlfriend Bruna Biancardi have announced they are expecting their first child together. Photo:@brunabiancardi Source: Instagram

    The post included a series of pictures, including some highlighting Biancardi’s visibly growing baby bump. The post was coupled with a passionate message to the unborn child of how she has a beautiful family awaiting his/her coming into this world.

    Neymar has been in a relationship with Biancardi for some time, and the news of their upcoming child has been well-received by his fans and followers on social media. This will be Neymar’s third child, as he is already a father to a son, Davi Lucca, whom he had with his former partner Carolina Dantas, and a daughter, whose mother’s identity is not publicly known.

  • Pele, ‘great’ now regarded as adjective in Portuguese dictionary

    Pele, ‘great’ now regarded as adjective in Portuguese dictionary

    The football player “Pele,” who is regarded as the best in history, is now an adjective.

    The term “pele” was added to the more than 167,000 words in the Brazilian-printed Michaelis Portuguese dictionary on Wednesday.

    The 265 million or more Portuguese speakers around the world can now use the word “pele” to refer to something or someone outstanding, the same way in which it is currently used colloquially in Brazil.

    “The expression already used to refer to someone who is the best at what they do has been eternalized on the pages of the dictionary!” the Pele Foundation said on Instagram.

    Under the new entry, the word is defined as “exceptional, incomparable, unique” — qualities associated with “The King” of football who died in December at the age of 82.

    The online version of the Michaelis also provides useful examples: “He is the pele of basketball… She is the pele of Brazilian drama.”

    For now, the word has been included only in the Michaelis online version, though it will be added to printed dictionaries in future.

    It is the result of a campaign by the Pele Foundation, the sports channel SporTV and the Sao Paulo football club Santos where Pele played for much of his career.

    Pele scored a world record 1,281 goals during his more than two decades playing with Santos (1956-74), the Brazilian national team, and the New York Cosmos (1975-77).

  • Ancelotti has till May to accept or decline Brazil national team role

    Ancelotti has till May to accept or decline Brazil national team role

    Brazil has no intention of waiting forever for Carlo Ancelotti and have given the Real Madrid manager an ultimatum to accept or reject their offer to become their national team coach.

    The five-time World champions have identified Ancelotti as their preferred option to take over from Tite, who resigned from his position following Brazil’s ouster from the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

    Ancelotti has publicly revealed that the Brazilian FA has contacted him but remains coy about committing his future to the South American giants when the 2022/23 season ends.

    Brazilian authorities have now given Ancelotti until May 25th to respond to their offer as they seek to quickly fill the post that has been vacant since December 2022.

    If Ancelotti accepts the Brazil job, it will become the Italian’s first national team job after successes in club football with top teams like AC Milan, Real Madrid and Chelsea.

    Real Madrid line up Ancelotti replacement

    Meanwhile, Real Madrid president Florentino Perez has identified club legend Xabi Alonso as a potential replacement for manager Carlo Ancelotti if the Italian leaves this summer, Sportskeeda reports.

    Ancelotti is currently under contract at the Santiago Bernabeu until the summer of 2024, but the Italian could leave the club early to take over as coach of the Brazil national team.

    Perez is interested in bringing Alonso back to Real Madrid as coach, as the Spaniard has done wonders in his brief managerial career with Bayer Leverkusen, which he joined in October 2022.

    Ancelotti apologises to Real Madrid fans

    Earlier, Sports Brief reported Real Madrid saw any hope of them retaining their La Liga title disappear after they were embarrassingly thrashed 4-2 by Girona on Tuesday night.

    Despite having 72% possession, Los Blancos, who had not conceded a goal in La Liga in their previous six games, were outplayed by the Catalans and created far fewer chances than the hosts.

    Carlo Ancelotti has now apologised to the Real Madrid fans following the embarrassing defeat. He has vowed that the team will bounce back in its remaining competitions.

  • White House criticizes President of Brazil for ‘parroting propaganda’ over war

    White House criticizes President of Brazil for ‘parroting propaganda’ over war

    Brazil’s president was harshly criticized by the White House for saying that the US had encouraged the conflict in Ukraine.

    Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva stated the US needs to “start talking about peace” when he made the remark at the conclusion of his weekend visit to Beijing.

    John Kirby, a spokesman for the White House on national security, claimed today that Mr. Lula was “parroting Russian and Chinese propaganda” with his comments.

    The leader of Brazil is “simply misguided,” he continued.

  • World leaders are lining up to meet Xi Jinping. Should the US be worried?

    World leaders are lining up to meet Xi Jinping. Should the US be worried?

    Since late last month the Chinese leader has hosted heads of state and government chiefs from Spain, Singapore, Malaysia, France and the European Union – an unusual pace of diplomatic activity that comes as countries look to Beijing as the global economy sputters in the wake of the pandemic and war in Ukraine.

    On Friday, that list grew to include Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who is expected to sign a host of bilateral deals with Xi – and, like several of the leaders before him, arrives with hopes of making progress toward ending Russia’s war in Ukraine.

    But for Xi, this revolving door of visiting leaders – making the trip even as China has refused to condemn the Russian invasion – is also an opportunity to assert his vision for a global order not dictated by American rules – and push back against perceived threats.

    That’s especially urgent for the Chinese leader now, observers say.

    Three years of scaled-back diplomacy due to China’s strict Covid-19 controls coupled with economic challenges, entrenched competition with the United States and rising European concerns about Beijing’s foreign policy have left Xi under pressure to act.

    “(Chinese leaders) believe it’s time now for China to make its strategic plans,” said Li Mingjiang, an associate professor of international relations at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University.

    “A potentially good outcome is to weaken American alliances … so that’s why we’re seeing quite strenuous efforts made by Beijing to try to stabilize and improve relations with European countries, and also to try to improve and strengthen cooperation with emerging economies,” he said.

    As world leaders return to Beijing despite international concerns over the growing China-Russia relationship and Beijing’s intimidation of Taiwan, Xi has used the opportunity to thread his conversations with veiled criticism of the US and keywords that signal Xi’s own view for how to reshape global power.

    Speaking to Singapore’s Lee Hsien Loong late last month, Xi stressed that Asian countries together should “firmly oppose bullying, decoupling or severing industrial and supply chains,”while he urged Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to “resolutely resist the Cold War mentality and bloc confrontation.”

    To Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez that same day, he warned that the “sound development of China-EU relations requires the EU to uphold strategic independence,” according to readouts from the Chinese side.

    Beijing has watched uneasily as the war in Ukraine has driven the US and its European allies closer. Now, analysts say playing up its economic partnerships and exploiting differences between countries on the two sides of the Atlantic is key.

    When French President Emmanuel Macron arrived in Beijing last week, Xi drew comparisons between China and France: both “major countries with a tradition of independence,” Xi said, and “firm advocates for a multi-polar world” – or a world without a dominant superpower.

    After a day of meetings in Beijing, Xi met Macron in the southern commercial hub of Guangzhou to continue an “informal” conversation – sipping tea and listening to the plucked melodies of traditional Chinese music before a state dinner.

    Macron, who has long advocated for Europe to develop an independent geopolitical policy and defense capabilities that needn’t rely on Washington, appeared receptive.

    He released a 51-point joint statement with China outlining cooperation on areas from nuclear energy to food security and told reporters traveling with him that when it comes to the US-China rivalry Europe must not be “caught up in crises that are not ours, which prevents it from building its strategic autonomy,” according to a Politico interview.

    Macron’s comments have sparked backlash in Europe and the US, but analysts say they were likely seen as a triumph in Beijing.

    “Everything that can weaken the US, divide the West and move countries closer to China is good for Xi,” said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, a professor of political science at Hong Kong Baptist University. “Hence, Macron’s trip is seen in Beijing as a major victory.”

    Xi may be preparing for another potential diplomatic win when he meets Lula on Friday.

    The leftist Brazilian leader, who ushered in a boom in China-Brazil trade ties during his first stint in power some two decades ago, is traveling with a delegation of business leaders, state governors, congressmen and ministers, and expected to close a raft of bilateral deals from agriculture and livestock to technology.

    Lula’s return to power already shifts the dynamics of the China-Brazil relationship, which saw tense moments under former leader Jair Bolsonaro, who embraced anti-China rhetoric.

    Lula has already started out his state visit in Shanghai with a nod to Brazil and China cooperation, attending the former Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff’s inauguration as head of the New Development Bank of BRICS, the bloc of emerging economies of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa that offers an alternative power grouping to the Western-centric G7.

    “Xi will find in Lula a BRICS enthusiast, openness to reforms in the global governance system and the desire to avoid automatic alignment with the US,” said Luiza Duarte, a research fellow at American University’s Center for Latin American and Latino Studies in Washington.

    Meanwhile, Lula’s expected warm welcome in Beijing “raises comparison with his frustrating less than 24-hour visit to Washington,” she said, referring to the Brazilian leader’s February 10 visit to the White House.

    The meeting was seen at the time as a key outreach from the newly inaugurated Lula to the US.

    But Beijing may use the “lack of deliverables” from that meeting “to position itself as a more appealing alternative for bilateral cooperation,” said Duarte.

    Looming over diplomacy in Beijing is the Russian assault in Ukraine.

    Some leaders – like Macron – have viewed Xi, a close friend and diplomatic partner of Russian President Vladimir Putin, as a potential ally that could help push Putin toward peace.

    But their relationship has also raised concern, with US officials earlier this year warning that China was considering providing the Kremlin with lethal aid – a claim Beijing has denied.

    While France and China agreed to several points related to the war in their meeting – including opposition to attacks on nuclear power plants and the protection of women and children – Macron did not ultimately push Xi to commit on paper to any position China has not already publicly said.

    Brazil, in advance of Lula’s trip, has offered another view: creating – as the country’s foreign minister put it – “a group of mediator countries” including China.

    But how Beijing navigates these initiatives, observers say, comes down to a bottom line that’s integrally related to Xi’s global ambitions and world view.

    “It will be difficult for China to respond positively to some of the requests made by either the Americans or Europeans, because doing this would produce the risk of making the Russians upset,” said Li in Singapore.

    “Russia is the only major power that shares a lot of (China’s) views on how the world and the global system should look and how various political issues should be handled. Russia is irreplaceable for China,” he said.

    That point was highlighted in another moment on Xi’s recent diplomatic agenda: his travel to Moscow in March for his own state visit – the first since he stepped into a third presidential term that same month.

    And while China’s diplomacy – and deals – in the past week may not have been heavily impacted by the optics of that relationship, analysts say how Beijing handles the conflict will continue to affect views on China globally.

    Perceptions about Xi’s potential influence over Putin have provided “leverage that allows (Xi) to get a lot of attention, and perhaps get mileage and support that he would otherwise not have,” said Chong Ja Ian, an associate professor at the National University of Singapore.

    “Ultimately, the test will come down to whether Xi is actually able to exert any real influence on Putin, especially in terms of ceasing the war,” he said.

  • Shocking: Brazilian football match interrupted as father storms pitch with child to assault player

    Shocking: Brazilian football match interrupted as father storms pitch with child to assault player

    At the end of a thrilling Brazilian football game on Sunday, a thug stormed onto the pitch and kicked a player while holding a small child in his arms.

    After a large brawl broke out at the conclusion of the match between Internacional and Caxias, television cameras caught the brazen attack.

    Caxias, a team from Caxias do Sul in southern Brazil, had just defeated Porto Alegre’s Internacional on penalties when the scandalous events took place.

    The video shows the Estadio Beira-Rio, Internacional’s home stadium, erupting in fury as the Caxias player put the ball past the goalkeeper and celebrated the victory by cupping his hands to his ears.

    Internacional players and team staff can be seen chasing the Caxias players around the ground, cheered on by their baying home supporters, all while stewards meekly attempt to bring the escalating situation under control. 

    Several clashes between the rival players and staff are seen breaking out across the pitch and the sidelines, with punches and kicks flying in from all directions. 

    A number of players from both teams are shown being taken to the ground.

    As the cameras zoom in on one particular flash point, one fan is seen carrying a young girl – presumed to be his daughter – on to the pitch, wading into the fray with seemingly little consideration for the safety of the child.

    As stewards attempt to hold him back, the Internacional fan walks up behind a Caxias player who is facing the other way. 

    The player is helping another who is seen clutching his face, his nose visibly wound having been struck in the mass brawl.

    Suddenly, the furious thug kicks up powerfully between the other player’s legs.

    Two teammates of the Caxias player rush in to defend him, but quickly realise that the man is carrying the young girl – and hesitate, seemingly out of confusion.

    One of the players is seen trying to warn the other angry teammates about the young girl, and the trio are able to restrain themselves from going after the thug.

    The footage cuts to another on-pitch camera, which zooms in on the man’s face.

    With a furious look in his eyes, he is seen being dragged away by three stewards. 

    The young girl is visibly terrified as she is buffeted about, as the man is pulled away back towards the stands where he first appeared from.

    The mass brawl was an acrimonious end to the match that also saw a red card and finished 1-1, before going on to be decided by a penalty shootout.

    The match was a fixture from the Campeonato Gaúcho, the state football league of the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul – which is separate from Brazil’s Série A – the country’s top division which Internacional also compete in.

    Last season, Internacional finished second in Série A – suggesting that Caxias were the underdogs in the hotly-contested fixture. Nevertheless, Caxias came out on top, and will be competing in the final of Campeonato Gaúcho next week.

    The incident was not the first time a fan from Internacional has been involved in a violent incident. In February last year, a footballer from Gremio – a fierce rival  to Internacional – has taken to hospital after being hit in the head by a rock.  

  • City’s goalkeeper Ederson hints on Ancelotti becoming Brazil’s coach

    City’s goalkeeper Ederson hints on Ancelotti becoming Brazil’s coach

    The goalkeeper for Manchester City, Ederson, recently expressed his opinions on the possibility of Carlo Ancelotti taking over as Brazil’s new head coach after leaving his position as manager of Real Madrid.

    Months after Tite made the decision to resign following a lacklustre 2022 World Cup campaign, Brazil has yet to name a new head coach.

    Ederson claimed he and his Brazilian teammates have been talking about the possibility, despite the fact that Ancelotti and Real Madrid have both recently refuted rumours that they would take over as Brazil’s new coach.

    It's a big possibility - Ederson speaks on Ancelotti becoming Brazil's coach

    He said at a press conference;

    “I was discussing this with Casemiro, Vinicius Junior, [Eder] Militão. There is a big possibility that he comes.

    “Just look at his CV. We will know shortly whether he will be here or not. I hope we can have a new coach quickly. I feel the anticipation too because there’s too much speculation. Is it a Brazilian or a foreign coach? We are also living that phase of anxiety.”

  • 1,500 Brazilian construction workers sacked over DDEP in Kumasi

    1,500 Brazilian construction workers sacked over DDEP in Kumasi

    Over 1,500 construction workers employed for the construction of the Kumasi Central Market, Kumasi International Airport, and the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospitals Mother and Baby Units (MBU) have had their contracts terminated by a Brazilian construction firm known as a “Contractor”.

    The company in December 2022 began terminating employees appointment in accordance with the Labor Act in monthly batches, affecting a total of 1500 employees.

    A management member of the company revealed, under the condition of anonymity, to GHone TV’s Ashanti Regional Correspondent, that all the affected employees received a one-month notice of appointment termination followed by a compensation package.

    “Management didn’t want to violate the country’s labour laws so we followed every step including medical check out. This is not something we intended to do but the situation has forced us to do that,” the management member stated.

    He disclosed that the Kumasi airport phase two projects which is about 95 percent completed left with installation of gadgets, control towers, and extension of round ways.

    The management member added that the demolition of existing structures is all on hold due to lack of funds to facilitate the completion of the entire project.

    “The project has been affected by the ongoing government debt restructure programme. Government, I mean the finance minister has suspended external payment. So the UK government responsible for founding the project has stopped releasing funding to us to work on the project. So we are ready to work but we don’t have money to pay workers and buy material so that’s the problem we are facing at the moment,” our source explained.

    He continued: “At the moment only few administrative staff are currently working with the company doing administrative work with few drivers. All our vehicles have equally been packed at our warehouse. So for now there’s no work on any of our sites.”

    Central Market Phase Two Project

    The Central Market project sod cutting was held on 2nd May 2019 by President Nana Akufo Addo in company of Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II and expected to be completed by the end of March 2024.

    However, the construction firm disclosed they can’t meet the deadline due delays on the project, a development they stressed is beyond their control.

    “We can’t meet the deadline for the traders to come and trade in the Central Market. This is because the former Kumasi mayor failed to relocate the traders on time for the project to start on time as we wanted. We have already wasted a lot of time on this project before this IMF recommended debt restructure programme affecting the entire project. You know money and equipment were ready but KMA didn’t show any commitment to them to support the project. At some point the UK government wanted to take their money back until Regional Minister Simon Osei-Mensah’s intervention.”

    Meanwhile, Central Market traders who were relocated to the racecourse market and others who have no place to trade are expected to hold a major demonstration against the government on Monday 13th March 2023 over the stalled Kumasi Central Market project.

    Manhyia Palace

    Another source close to Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II also confirmed Otumfuo Osei Tutu II has been briefed about the stalled work on the three sites. As a result of the debt restructuring programme proposed by the IMF that the government is depending on a loan to restructure the country’s collapsing economy.

    “You all know the role Otumfuo played behind the scenes on this project. The King is aware of the situation. He will soon travel to the UK for the coronation of King Charles the King of Great Britain in the coming days and this issue will be looked at. It’s unfortunate but these are priority projects which are dear to Otumfuo and fall within the Asanteman development agenda so Otumfuo will take the right step I can assure you of that”.

  • Jair Bolsonaro contemplates visiting Brazil ‘in the coming weeks’

    Jair Bolsonaro contemplates visiting Brazil ‘in the coming weeks’

    The alleged instigator of a violent election denial movement, the ex-president of Brazil, tells a Florida audience that he plans to soon return home.

    Jair Bolsonaro, a former president of Brazil, announced on Saturday that he would be going back to his country “in the coming weeks” after spending more than a month there.

    Before the current president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, took office on January 1, Bolsonaro took a flight to Florida. He then applied for a six-month tourist visa to extend his stay in the US.

    “There is no place like home… We know Brazil is a fantastic country,” Bolsonaro told a gathering of Brazilians in Boca Raton, a video posted online by broadcaster CNN showed.

    “I also want to return to Brazil. I intend to return to Brazil in the coming weeks.”

    A swift return to Brazil could pose risks for Bolsonaro, who is accused of instigating a violent election denial movement in his home country.

    Brazil’s Supreme Court has agreed to open an investigation into Bolsonaro for allegedly encouraging anti-democratic protests that ended in the storming of government buildings by his supporters in Brasilia.

    His plans to return were put into question after his lawyer told the Reuters news agency last month the former president would like to “enjoy being a tourist in the United States for a few months before deciding what his next step will be”.

    Still, a US official with knowledge of the situation told Reuters this week officials believe Bolsonaro will return to Brazil after the carnival festival, which ends on February 22.

  • Jair Bolsonaro accused of attending election scheme meeting ahead of elections

    Jair Bolsonaro accused of attending election scheme meeting ahead of elections

    Brazilian senator says, Jair Bolsonaro, the country’s former president, allegedly attended a meeting about a plan to keep him in power.

    Marcos do Val asserts that he was asked to get the head of the electoral authority to compromise himself in order to call into question the validity of the presidential election.

    Mr. Bolsonaro’s supporters falsely accused voting fraud after his close loss in the election in October.

    Despite the fact that his son has acknowledged the meeting actually occurred, he denies any wrongdoing.

    Mr do Val told a news conference on Thursday that he was invited to a meeting on December 9 with Mr Bolsonaro by Daniel Silveira, a former lawmaker and a close ally of the former president. This was more than a month after Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva had won the election and three days before his presidency was formally approved.

    Mr Silveira then allegedly asked Mr Do Val to get the head of the electoral authority, Justice Alexandre de Moraes, to make compromising comments on tape that would lead to his arrest.

    “I immediately said that I would not do that, I would not do that type of thing,” said Mr do Val, who claimed that Mr Bolsonaro “sat in silence” while Mr Silveira laid out the details of the plot during the meeting.

    However, he has denied suggestions that he was coerced by the former president, telling journalists he “was in a position similar to mine, listening to an odd idea by Daniel Silveira”.

    Marcos do Val - 2 February
    Image caption,Marcos do Val denied that Mr Bolsonaro himself tried to force him to get involved in the plot

    Mr do Val’s comments come after Mr Silveira was arrested on Thursday in relation to previous offences after his parliamentary immunity came to an end.

    According to Reuters, Mr de Moraes has ordered Mr do Val to provide sworn testimony to federal police within five days as part of a Supreme Court investigation into the 8 January riots, in which Mr Bolsonaro has been named among those potentially responsible.

    Thousands of Bolsonaro supporters stormed the country’s Supreme Court, Congress and presidential palace in the capital, Brasília, after camping in and around the city for weeks calling for a military coup.

    Mr Bolsonaro has voiced “regret” for the unrest, but denies he caused it. Neither he nor his representatives have yet commented on Mr do Val’s remarks.

    The former president is currently in Florida after leaving Brazil at the end of December, before his successor was sworn in. His lawyers have told the BBC he has applied for a 6-month US tourist visa.

  • Brazil’s Yanomami Indigenous people face crisis, calls for action

    Brazil’s Yanomami Indigenous people face crisis, calls for action

    Amazonian indigenous communities are under attack as corporate interests aggressively expand their operations.

    As illegal gold miners threaten them with violence and obstruct the delivery of supplies like food and medicine to their troubled region, Brazilian officials claim that the Yanomami Indigenous people are forced to live in appalling conditions.

    Weibe Tapeba, the Indigenous Health Secretary, stated on Tuesday that the government needs to remove the miners, some of whom are heavily armed, from a section of the Yanomami reservation close to the Venezuelan border.

    “It looks like a concentration camp,” Tapeba said of the Yanomami’s living conditions in a radio interview. “It’s an extreme calamity. Many Yanomami are suffering from malnutrition and there is a total absence of the Brazilian state.”

    The statement comes three days after Brazil declared a public health emergency for the Yanomami people in the Amazon rainforest, who suffer from malnutrition and diseases like malaria due to the actions of the miners.

    Under former far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, critics have said the government largely stood by as Indigenous rights were violated and forests were torched, allowing business interests to illegally extend their reach into the Amazon.

    An April 2022 report by the Hutukara Yanomami Association found a 46-percent increase in the area of land on the Yanomami reservation that was scarred by “garimpo”, or wildcat gold mining, in 2021.

    Tapeba also said that an invasion of about 20,000 illegal gold miners contaminated rivers and their fish with mercury, poisoning a food source for the Yanomami and causing children to lose their hair.

    President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who defeated Bolsonaro in the 2022 elections and was sworn in earlier this month, visited the region last weekend after photos were published of Yanomami children and elderly so malnourished that their ribs were protruding.

    Lula has promised to crack down on illegal business activity in the Amazon, protect Indigenous communities and reverse the massive deforestation that proliferated during Bolsonaro’s time in office.

    On Monday, Justice Minister Flavio Dino also stated that there was “evidence of genocide” that was under investigation.

    “Health teams cannot get here because of the heavily armed bandits. This can only be resolved by removing the gold miners, and that can only be done by the armed forces,” said Tapeba, who was appointed by Lula’s government.

    The group Survival International warned in December that malnutrition among the Yanomami was reaching critical levels, citing a report by UNICEF showing that children under the age of five were dying of preventable disease at 13 times the national average.

    In a statement, Survival International director ​​Fiona Watson called the situation “a deliberate, man-made crisis, stoked by President Bolsonaro, who has encouraged the mass invasion and destruction of the Yanomami’s lands”.

    Bolsonaro’s government, which was in power from 2019 to 2022, has faced widespread criticism for turning a blind eye to illegal activities in the Amazon, leading to increased violence as the interests of loggers, miners and other illicit operations clashed with Indigenous people and land defenders.

    In October 2021, the Catholic Church’s Indigenous Missionary Council said there were 182 murders of Indigenous people in 2020, compared with 113 murders in 2019, a 61-percent increase.

    On Monday, Brazilian authorities said that a fish trader was likely behind the 2022 assassination of Indigenous expert Bruno Pereira and British journalist Dom Phillips in the Amazon.

    The suspect, Ruben Dario da Silva Villar, allegedly ordered the murders because Pereira, a former employee of Brazil’s federal Indigenous agency FUNAI, was causing losses to his illegal fishing operation.

    Deforestation also reached dizzying heights during Bolsonaro’s tenure, increasing 150 percent in December over the previous year. Bolsonaro, a noted agribusiness ally, had pushed for development in the Amazon as a way to increase economic activity and address poverty.

  • Brazil-Argentina summit: Countries meeting to focus on trade, economic integration

    Brazil-Argentina summit: Countries meeting to focus on trade, economic integration

    Fernandez, the president of Argentina, and Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil, are considering the possibility of a common currency.

    Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil, has arrived in Argentina for a summit where the two countries will collaborate to strengthen their trade relations.

    Lula’s arrival on Monday followed the publication of a joint article by him and Alberto Fernandez, in which they stated that studies on a common South American currency were part of their goal for greater economic integration.

    Brazilian Finance Minister Fernando Haddad downplayed the idea of Argentina and Brazil adopting a single common currency, saying late on Sunday that the nations were looking at ways to promote bilateral trade without eradicating their respective national currencies.

    Haddad, who had floated the possibility of a common currency in an article last year, said removing trade barriers between the two largest economies in South America could involve using a single currency for commerce, given a lack of United States dollars in Argentina. But that does not spell the end of the Brazilian real, he said.

    “Trade is really bad and the problem is precisely the foreign currency, right? So we are trying to find a solution, something in common that could make commerce grow,” Haddad told reporters as he arrived in Buenos Aires.

    Haddad said Argentina’s trade with Brazil had suffered due to a lack of dollars in the southern neighbour, where an economic crisis has left the government battling to replenish foreign currency reserves, with an inflation rate of nearly 100 percent last year.

    Haddad noted Argentina was an important buyer of Brazilian industrial goods and that “several possibilities” were being floated to circumvent its currency problems, though no decision had been made.

    Asked if he could provide further details on the currency issue, Haddad confirmed he would clear the matter up in the coming days, “especially because some people are saying the real will end”

    Brazil is Argentina’s largest trade partner, according to official figures published last week by the INDEC national statistics institute.

    Brazil is the top destination for Argentine exports, amounting to 14.3 percent and $12.7bn in 2022.

    Close to 20 percent of Argentina’s imports are from Brazil, worth just over $16bn last year.

    “Argentina is the most important country in our diplomatic relations,” Feliciano de Sa Guimaraes, academic director for the Brazilian Center for Diplomatic Relations, told AFP.

    Likewise, Fernandez’s government “depends a lot on Brazil”, not least in its negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), with whom Argentina has a $44bn debt.

    Earlier on Sunday, Lula and Fernandez said in an article published on the Argentine website Perfil that they would “advance discussions on a common South American currency that can be used for both financial and commercial flows”.

    The Financial Times had previously reported, citing Argentina’s Economy Minister Sergio Massa, that the neighbouring nations would announce this week they were starting preparatory work on a common currency.

    Brazil and Argentina will sign a bilateral agreement creating a guarantee fund to stimulate Brazilian exports, a Brazilian government source told the Reuters news agency on Monday, as officials from both governments meet for a summit in Buenos Aires.

    Under the deal, Argentina will have to provide a collateral guarantee for Brazil’s trade financing with international liquidity, the source said, adding that the two largest economies in South America will also establish a working group to study creating a single clearing account in the continent, Reuters reported.

  • Mum delivers record-breaking 2ft-tall baby weighing 16lb

    Mum delivers record-breaking 2ft-tall baby weighing 16lb

    A woman has given birth to a giant baby weighing 16lb and measuring 2ft tall in Brazil

    Angerson Santos was welcomed into the world via C-section at Hospital Padre Colombo in Parintins, Amazonas State, on Wednesday, January 18. 

    Medics believe that the supersize baby is the biggest to have ever been born in the state, beating the previous record of 13lb and 1.8ft.

    Cleidiane Santos dos Santos had visited the hospital for a routine obstetric consultation, reports the Mirror.

    But doctors quickly realised that the unborn baby would be too big for her to carry to full term so kept her in for a C-section.

    Surgeons carried out the C-section the next day and Angerson was born weighing 7.328 kilogrammes and measuring 59 centimetres.

    The baby is in an incubator but is in stable condition and has no abnormalities, according to medics at the hospital.

    Angerson is so large that none of the newborn clothes his parents had purchased prior to his arrival fit so a fundraiser has been launched to help the family buy new clothes.

    The facility is taking donations of extra-large nappies and clothes for babies aged between nine months and a year.

    Angerson smashes the previous Amazonas state record set by Pedro Aluizio, who was born in Parintins in 2014 weighing 6.74 kilogrammes (14lb 8oz) and measuring 57 centimetres.

    Before that, the record was held by a baby born in the municipality in 2011 weighing 6.12 (13lb) kilogrammes and measuring 56 centimetres (1.8ft).

    Source: Express.co.uk 

  • Brazil: 39 people charged over pro-Bolsonaro riots

    Brazil: 39 people charged over pro-Bolsonaro riots

    The 39 defendants are to be sentenced to prison and have $7.7 million of their assets frozen to help pay for the damages, according to the prosecution.

    Some of the thousands of people accused of storming government buildings in an effort to overturn the results of the October election, which former President Jair Bolsonaro lost, have received their first charges from Brazil’s prosecutor-general.

    The 39 defendants accused of ransacking Congress were also asked to have 40 million reals ($7.7 million) in assets frozen as a preventive measure and to be imprisoned, according to the prosecutors in the recently established group to combat anti-democratic acts.

    The defendants have been charged with armed criminal association, violent attempt to subvert the democratic state of law, staging a coup and damage to public property, the prosecutor general’s office said in a written statement. Their identities have not yet been released.

    More than 1,000 people were arrested on the day of the January 8 riot, which bore strong similarities to the January 6, 2021 riots at the US Congress by mobs who wanted to overturn former President Donald Trump’s loss in the November 2020 election.

    Rioters who stormed through the Brazilian Congress, presidential palace and Supreme Court in the capital, Brasilia, sought to have the armed forces intervene and overturn Bolsonaro’s loss to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

    The rioters “attempted, with the use of violence and serious threat, to abolish the democratic rule of law, preventing or restricting the exercise of constitutional powers”, according to an excerpt of charges included in a statement. “The ultimate objective of the attack … was the installation of an alternative government regime.”

    The attackers were not charged with “terrorism” because under Brazilian law such a charge must involve xenophobia or prejudice based on race, ethnicity or religion.

    The prosecutor-general’s office sent its charges to the Supreme Court after the Senate’s president, Rodrigo Pacheco, last week provided a list of people accused of rampaging through Congress. Additional rioters are expected to be charged.

    Second Brazilian arrested for anti-Lula bomb plot

    On Tuesday, Brazilian police said they arrested a second suspect in a truck bomb attempt that failed just a week before Silva’s inauguration.

    The first suspect was arrested on Christmas Eve after the driver of the truck found the device near the airport in the capital Brasilia, where the inauguration happened a week later.

    Police said there had been a failed attempt to activate the device.

    The first suspect, identified as George Washington de Oliveira Sousa, is a Bolsonaro supporter and told police he wanted to “prevent the establishment of communism in Brazil” under Lula, police said.

    An alleged accomplice, Alan Diego dos Santos Rodrigues, 32, has been wanted ever since and handed himself over to police on Tuesday in the state of Mato Grosso.

    Police “made contact with people close to the suspect and, after negotiations, this Tuesday (17th), Alan Diego presented himself,” a police statement said.

    A third suspect is on the run.

    Meanwhile, Lula has removed 40 troops guarding the presidential residence after expressing distrust in the military for failing to act against demonstrators who ransacked the government buildings.

    Most of the troops guarding the Alvorada Palace, as the residence is called, are from the army, but some are also members of the Navy, Air Force and a militarised police force.

    Last week, Lula told reporters that security force members were complicit in letting the mob storm the main buildings that form the seat of power in Brasilia.

    Source: Aljazeera.com

  • Brazil World Cup exit ‘worse than losing a family member’, Richarlison

    Brazil World Cup exit ‘worse than losing a family member’, Richarlison

    Richarlison has opined that Croatia’s victory against Brazil in the World Cup quarterfinal was “worse than losing a family member.”

    The Selecao, who were pre-tournament favorites, won Group G and destroyed South Korea 4-1 in the round of 16, raising hopes that they may win the championship for the first time since 2002.

    However, their campaign was cut short in Qatar when they lost to Croatia on penalties in the quarterfinals because Marquinhos and Rodrygo failed to convert their spot-kicks.

    http://backend.theindependentghana.com/world-cup-2022-croatia-knock-out-brazil-to-reach-semis/

    Many players were affected by the defeat, including Neymar, who had given Brazil the lead in extra time before Bruno Petkovic’s goal forced penalties. Neymar was seen crying on the field as Croatia celebrated their triumph.

    Richarlison told ESPN: “It was a blow, I don’t know. I think it’s worse than losing a family member.

    “It was difficult to recover. To this day, when I watch videos on my social networks, it makes me sad.

    “But we have to move on. I’m still young, I think I still have one or two World Cups to go. I will keep working hard so that things start to flow again, the goals start to come out, which is what I know how to do on the field.”

    Despite the disappointing end to the tournament, it was a strong World Cup for Richarlison, who was Brazil’s top scorer with three goals.

    The Tottenham forward’s bicycle kick against Serbia won the goal of the tournament award and has also been nominated for the 2022 Puskas Award, handed out by FIFA to the best goal of a calendar year.

    “Our goal was to be champion. I scored a beautiful goal, but I think that goal, let’s say, was not my goal,” Richarlison added. “We went there to raise the cup. 

    “But I’m also happy to have scored that great goal, even running for the Puskas. I was happy, because I think a lot of people started to know me more. It was very important in my career.”

  • It is not true that Pelé did not fight racism

    It is not true that Pelé did not fight racism

    Throughout his life, the Brazilian football star stood up to oppression, inspiring black people at home and abroad.

    In the days after the death of football star Pelé, there was a global outpouring of grief and much reflection on his legacy. I, like millions of other fans across the world, was mourning. Although I had never met Pelé in person, it felt like I had lost an elder, who I was close to and deeply admired.

    There was a lot of international media attention, a lot of obituaries, articles, interviews, reports acknowledging his iconic status and his sporting achievements. But there was one persistent line of commentary that irked me.

    Sports observers and media outlets kept insisting that Pelé did not speak out against racism. Some would mention it in passing, others would dedicate whole segments to it, still others would bring up the inevitable comparison with American boxing star Muhammad Ali. This criticism was often levelled at Pelé while he was still alive, and he was not spared even in his death.

    As an Afro-Brazilian, I feel this persistent scrutiny of what Pelé said or did not say is unfair, to say the least. The fact that he did not make certain statements does not mean he did not participate in the fight against racism.

    Throughout his life and career, Pelé experienced racism and discrimination. He was keenly aware of racial inequalities and injustices, and he confronted them in a different way than some other Black sports stars who were his contemporaries.

    Pelé was born just 52 years after Brazil abolished slavery in 1888, the last country in the Western hemisphere to do so. But growing up, he faced neither apartheid nor Jim Crow laws. Brazil at that time had made racism illegal and considered itself a “racial democracy”.

    The idea that the country enjoyed racial harmony was put forward in the 1930s by Brazilian sociologist Gilberto Freyre. Himself a white wealthy man and a descendant of European colonisers, he claimed that Portuguese colonisation was somehow benign and that slavery was not as gruesome as in the United States and therefore, Brazil did not suffer from the same type of brutal structural racism.

    This idea – or rather myth – was quite durable and even I was taught at school and university many decades later that Brazil somehow had exceptionally positive relations between the races thanks to supposed high rates of miscegenation.

    That, of course, was and still is not the case. Brazil of the 1940s and 50s, when Pelé was growing up, was heavily racially divided. The elites were almost exclusively white, while the majority of the poor were Black, Indigenous, and mixed-race. Meanwhile, the government continued to encourage European immigration in order to boost the number of (the more “desirable”) whites in the country.

    Brazilian football also suffered from racism. The sport had been brought into Brazil at the turn of the century by wealthy white men – like Oscar Cox and Charles Miller – who had studied in Europe. In the early days of Brazilian football, there were attempts to forbid Black people from playing in official matches and later, in the 1910s and 20s, some Afro-Brazilian players felt compelled to straighten their hair and put rice powder on their skin to hide their African features.

    US politics, Canada’s multiculturalism, South America’s geopolitical rise—we bring you the stories that matter.

    Despite this reality, the myth of “racial democracy” persisted and ended up weakening anti-racist activism. Although at that time, Brazil had a Black emancipation movement, it was not as strong as the civil rights movement in the US or the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa.

    The idea of “racial democracy” also instilled a culture of denial – that racism did not exist. This was reinforced by the media and the military dictatorship which came to power in Brazil in a 1964 coup.

    Pelé was aware of these dynamics. He was playing a sport dominated by whites, faced media controlled by whites and a merciless dictatorship run by whites; he knew that being confrontational would not take him far. In fact, speaking out against those in power resulted in torture and death at that time.

    As Brazilian historian Ynaê Lopes dos Santos has pointed out: “This stance that he took was very calculated, coming from a Black man who knew how to play the game of racism in Brazil. In this sense and many others, he is a winner. A Black man that became a Brazilian symbol, a country that in many moments projected itself as white. This is based on a very sophisticated assessment that he made on how Brazil works.”

    Throughout his career, Pelé persistently experienced racism. He had a number of racist nicknames that football fans and the media would use and often heard monkey chants during matches.

    But as he said in 2014 – in response to questions about racism in Brazilian football: “If I had to stop or shout every time I was racially abused since I started to play in Latin America, here in Brazil, in its interior, every game would have had to be stopped.”

    And not being vocal did not mean he was not fighting or resisting. When he decided to end his career in the national team in 1971, he was punished for it, with two events meant to celebrate his successful career cancelled. When the Brazilian authorities tried to force him to come back and compete in the 1974 World Cup, he refused, despite the persistent pressure and threats.

    So, Pelé fought racism and oppression through achievement, opening the door for other Black boys and girls to follow and inspiring Black Brazilians to dream big and defy discrimination.

    It is not an easy choice to stay silent when you are racially abused. I know that all too well.

    When I was in journalism school, a few professors picked me for an internship programme. They kept calling me “our project” as if I was a test subject and the reason they had picked me was to show that in our elite school, even young Black people could make it.

    Later as an intern at a São Paulo public TV station, I had to endure in silence a supervisor making racist jokes, an anchor telling me that without my braids I looked like a “real human being” and a producer making monkey noises on my last day there.

    I knew that if I had openly confronted all these racist individuals, my career would be jeopardised and the efforts of my family to support my education would be wasted.

    Later in life, I would also be criticised for not being more vocal by white liberals who never experienced racism. But I knew that their demands for me to take a more activist position were really a way to weaponise my pain and tokenise me.

    Still, my experiences of racism are probably just a fraction of what Pelé had to overcome in his life and career.

    The fact that he did served as a major inspiration for my grandparents’ generation. His achievements also transcended the field of sports. After he retired from football, he became a successful businessman, acted in a Hollywood movie, was appointed a UNESCO goodwill ambassador, took the post of a minister of sport and was even knighted by British Queen Elizabeth II.

    He demonstrated that anything was possible for a Black Brazilian man and that is why people called him “Rei Pelé” – King Pelé. I remember how when my grandparents would talk about him, the tone of their voices would change as if they were talking about their royalty, their Black king.

    By the time I was growing up in the late 1980s and early 90s, more Black people had made it to positions of prominence, including people in my extended family. But racism, of course, persisted. Afro-Brazilians were still a rare sight in Brazilian media, most often appearing in slavery-themed soap operas or as minor characters, often mocked, in TV shows. So I would regularly switch to American shows and films, where Black actors like Philip Michael Thomas and Danny Glover had become my idols.

    Pelé, nevertheless, remained a permanent fixture on Brazilian TV. He was one of the few Afro-Brazilians that I saw being respected when appearing or being mentioned. He motivated me to fight for my place in the media, a sphere which continues to be heavily dominated by white people.

    Now after his death, the global mourning has made me realise how much Pelé also meant to other Black people across the world. “Africa has lost a great son,” Ivory Coast Consul Tibe bi Gole Blaise said while attending Pelé’s wake at Santos stadium.

    Thus, I think the criticism thrown at Pelé and comparisons between him and Muhammad Ali are unfair. They degrade his contribution to the anti-racism struggle in Brazil and the world while presenting him as someone who neglected his race.

    That is really not the case. Pelé fought racism and carried the weight of the struggle so the generations of Black people that came after him would find more doors open. His way of fighting racism should be respected, just as Muhammad Ali’s has been.

    I am grateful to Pelé for what he did: donning the Brazilian football jersey and leading Brazil to the status of world power in football, breaking the glass ceiling, ripping the whitewashed image of Brazilian identity and paving the way for Afro-Brazilians to claim equality and respect in Brazilian sport and society at large. He truly played his “beautiful game” on and off the pitch.

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

    Source: Aljazeera.com

  • Brazil court to investigate Jair Bolsonaro role in anti-Lula riots

    Brazil court to investigate Jair Bolsonaro role in anti-Lula riots

    Prosecutors will look into Jair Bolsonaro’s possible “instigation and intellectual authorship of the anti-democratic acts’ that ‘resulted’ in the riots.

    Brazil’s Supreme Court has agreed to open an investigation into former President Jair Bolsonaro for allegedly encouraging anti-democratic protests that ended in the storming of government buildings by his supporters in the capital Brasilia.

    Prosecutors will investigate Bolsonaro, who is in the United States, for possible “instigation and intellectual authorship of the anti-democratic acts that resulted in vandalism and violence in Brasilia last Sunday,” the top public prosecutor’s office said in a statement on Friday.

    “Public figures who continue to cowardly conspire against democracy trying to establish a state of exception will be held accountable,” said Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who agreed on Friday to the request by federal prosecutors to launch the probe.

    The Supreme Court had already ordered the arrest of Bolsonaro’s former justice minister, Anderson Torres, for allowing the protests to take place in the Brazilian capital after he assumed responsibility for Brasilia’s public security.

    The federal district’s former governor and former military police chief are also targets of the Supreme Court investigation made public on Friday.

    Both were removed from their positions when thousands of Bolsonaro supporters vandalised the Supreme Court, Congress and presidential palace last weekend, seeking to provoke chaos and a military coup that would remove President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and restore the far-right Bolsonaro to power.

    Having lost Brazil’s October election to Lula, Bolsonaro left Brazil for the US on the eve of the end of his term, avoiding passing the presidential sash to his leftist rival at his inauguration.

    Torres, who like Bolsonaro is in Florida, has said he plans to return to Brazil to turn himself in. Bolsonaro said on social media he will move forward his return to Brazil.

    Justice Minister Flavio Dino told a news conference he would wait until next week to re-evaluate Torres’s case, indicating a possible request for his extradition if the former minister does not turn himself in.

    The arrest warrant against Torres was issued by de Moraes, who also removed Brasilia’s security chief from his post just hours after the rampage.

    On Thursday, police found a draft decree in Torres’s house that appeared to be a proposal to interfere in the result of the election. Torres claimed the document was among others in a stack that was being thrown out. He said they were “leaked” to the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper in his absence to create a “false narrative”.

    Dino said he has made no requests to the US regarding Bolsonaro.

    The political party to which Bolsonaro belongs, the right-wing Liberal Party (PL), decided to beef up its team of lawyers in preparation for the defence of the former president, a party official told Reuters.

    Also on Friday night, the popular social media accounts of several prominent right-wing figures were suspended in Brazil in response to a court order, which US journalist Glenn Greenwald obtained and detailed on a live social media broadcast.

    The order, also issued by Justice de Moraes, was directed at six social media platforms and established a two-hour deadline to block the accounts or face fines.

    The accounts belong to a digital influencer, a YouTuber recently elected federal legislator, a podcast host in the style of Joe Rogan and an evangelical pastor, among others.

    Bolsonaro now faces several investigations for anti-democratic statements he made as president, including repeated claims the election system was open to fraud.

    PL party leaders fear he will be held responsible for Sunday’s storming of government buildings. While they do not think he will face arrest, they fear he could be declared ineligible to run in the 2026 election, the party official said.

    Source: Aljazeera.com
  • Large pro-democracy rallies staged in Brazil’s Congress to denounce rioters

    Large pro-democracy rallies staged in Brazil’s Congress to denounce rioters

    In a furious reaction to Jair Bolsonaro’s supporters storming Congress, tens of thousands of Brazilians participated in pro-democracy protests.

    In the country’s largest city of São Paulo, crowds chanted that Mr Bolsonaro must go to prison.

    About 1,500 people have been held over Sunday’s riots in the capital Brasília.

    They came a week after President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was sworn in after October’s election that divided Brazil.

    On Monday evening, the 77-year-old new leader – widely known as Lula – visited the damaged buildings of Congress, the presidential palace and Supreme Court together with the country’s governors, condemning the “terrorist acts” and vowing to punish the perpetrators.

    Mr Bolsonaro, 67, has not admitted defeat in the tightly-fought election, and flew to the US before the handover on 1 January. On Monday, he was admitted to hospital in Florida with abdominal pain.

    Marina Rodrigues Carmona during a demonstration in São Paulo, Brazil. Photo: 9 January 2023
    Image caption, Marina Rodrigues Carmona fears that similar rioting could happen again

    On Monday, street rallies were held in a number of cities and towns.

    The turnout at São Paulo’s demonstration was impressive, the BBC’s Katy Watson reports from the city. A part of Paulista Avenue, Brazil’s most famous street, was blocked off as crowds filled the area, singing, dancing and chanting for justice.

    Many came dressed in red, the colours of Lula’s Workers’ Party; others waved placards saying “No amnesty for the coup mongers” and called for those responsible to be punished. There were also chants of “Prison for Bolsonaro”.

    “I don’t agree with what happened in Brasília – it was a nightmare. I don’t agree with those who believe that with democracy you can use your power to destroy democracy,” Gabriel, who only gave his first name, told the BBC.

    “I want to show to the world and our country that even though there are thousands of people who believe the elections weren’t valid, here in Brazil, we have a gigantic number of people who believe we can trust our government, we can trust in our democracy,” he said.

    A pro-democracy march in Porto Alegre in southern Brazil, around 1,200 miles (1931km) from the capital Brasilia
    Image caption, A pro-democracy march in Porto Alegre in southern Brazil, around 1,200 miles (1931km) from the capital Brasilia, where the riots happened

    Marina Rodrigues Carmona, another demonstrator, told the BBC: “Polarisation is a big problem – everyone has their own ideas, and I don’t think there’s much dialogue between the two sides.”

    There was, however, a huge police presence. At times, the atmosphere has felt tense. People are still processing what happened in Brasilia and nerves haven’t yet calmed for many, our correspondent says.

    Sunday’s dramatic scenes in Brasília saw thousands of protesters clad in yellow Brazil football shirts and flags overrun police and ransack the heart of the Brazilian state.

    Lula was forced to declare emergency powers.

    On Monday morning, heavily armed officers started dismantling a camp of Mr Bolsonaro’s supporters in Brasília – one of a number that have been set up outside army barracks around the country since the tightly-fought presidential election.

    https://emp.bbc.com/emp/SMPj/2.47.2/iframe.htmlMedia caption,

    Watch: Ros Atkins on… Why the Brazil riots happened

    Authorities arrested 1,200 people on Monday – in addition to 300 detained a day earlier.

    Mr Bolsonaro condemned the attack and denied responsibility for encouraging the rioters in a post on Twitter some six hours after violence broke out.

    Meanwhile, Brasília Governor Ibaneis Rocha has been removed from his post for 90 days by the Supreme Court.

    Justice Minister Alexandre de Moraes accused him of failing to prevent the riot and of being “painfully silent” in the face of the attack.

    Video shared by the Brazilian outlet O Globo showed some officers laughing and taking photos together as demonstrators occupied the congressional campus in the background.

    Timeline of attacks

    Bolsonaro supporters created camps in cities across Brazil, some of them outside the military barracks. That is because his most ardent supporters want the military to intervene and make good elections that they say were stolen.

    Some protesters are not just angry that Mr Bolsonaro lost the election – they want President Lula to return to prison.

    Lula spent 18 months in jail after being found guilty of corruption in 2017. His convictions were later annulled, after initially being sentenced to more than nine years.

    Heads of state around the world have also denounced the violence.

    Late on Monday, President Joe Biden “conveyed the unwavering support of the United States for Brazil’s democracy” during a phone call with Lula, the White House said in a statement.

    Comparisons have been drawn with the storming of the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 by supporters of Donald Trump, an ally of Mr Bolsonaro.

    Source: BBC

  • Mourinho set to take over as Brazil boss, claims Carlos Alberto

    Mourinho set to take over as Brazil boss, claims Carlos Alberto

    Roma head coach Jose Mourinho is set to take over as the next boss of Brazil, according to former Selecao international Carlos Alberto.

    Brazil are on the lookout for a new head coach after Tite stepped down, as planned, following Brazil’s disappointing defeat to Croatia in the World Cup quarter-finals last month.

    Mourinho is one of a number of names reportedly in the frame, while the 59-year-old has also been touted as a possible target for Portugal following Fernando Santos’ departure, though Roberto Martinez seems to be the frontrunner for that job.

    Carlos Alberto, who won the Champions League under Mourinho at Porto, says he has been offered the chance to work alongside the Portuguese as part of Brazil’s coaching staff.

    “I was going to drop a bomb here, but I can’t,” he told the Mundo GV podcast. “Maybe [Mourinho] is the coach of the Brazilian team. I’m speaking first hand. It’s information.

    “It doesn’t matter where the information comes from, I’m giving you the information… because he even invited me [to be his number two].”

    Mourinho led Roma to the inaugural Europa Conference League title last season – the Italian side’s first European trophy in more than 60 years.

    That was Mourinho’s fifth continental triumph, with the former Chelsea, Real Madrid, Inter, Manchester United and Tottenham boss having won both the UEFA Cup/Europa League and Champions League on two occasions.

    Roma are sixth in Serie A after winning just one of their five matches either side of the World Cup break. They did fight back to draw 2-2 with Milan at San Siro on Sunday, however.

    Speaking last week, Roma director Tiago Pinto insisted he expects Mourinho – under contract until the end of next season – to stay on at Stadio Olimpico.

    “When you get a coach like Mourinho, you must be accustomed to rumours,” Pinto told La Gazzetta dello Sport. 

    “This was the first time in 18 months that a club or a federation were interested in him. We had no distractions at our training camp in the Algarve, we were only focused on work. 

    “I am Portuguese and every time we change coach, Mourinho is mentioned, but we count on him for the future.”

  • Brazil Congress: Lula vows to punish Bolsonaro supporters following riots

    Brazil Congress: Lula vows to punish Bolsonaro supporters following riots

    Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has threatened to punish supporters of the country’s former leader, Jair Bolsonaro, who stormed Congress.

    Supporters of the deposed far-right leader also surrounded the presidential palace and stormed the Supreme Court.

    However, after hours of fighting, police reclaimed control of the buildings in Brasilia’s capital on Sunday evening.

    Lula visited the Supreme Court building upon his arrival in the city to inspect the damage.

    According to the Civil Police of Brasilia, 300 people have been arrested.

    The city’s governor, Ibaneis Rocha, has been removed from his post for 90 days by the Supreme Court. Justice Alexandre de Moraes accused him of failing to prevent the riot and of being “painfully silent” in the face of the attack. Mr Rocha has apologised for Sunday’s events.

    Pro-democracy rallies are being called by leftist leaders and groups across Brazil.

    The dramatic scenes – which saw thousands of protesters clad in yellow Brazil football shirts and flags overrun police and ransack the heart of the Brazilian state – come just a week after Lula’s inauguration.

    The veteran left-wing leader was forced to declare emergency powers before dispatching the national guard into the capital to restore order.

    He also ordered the closure of the centre of the capital, including the main avenue where governmental buildings are – for 24 hours.

    Justice Minister Flavio Dino said some 40 buses that had been used to transport protesters to the capital had been seized, and he called the invasion an “absurd attempt to impose [the protesters’] will by force.”

    Mr Bolsonaro has repeatedly refused to accept that he lost October’s election and last week left the country instead of taking part in inaugural ceremonies, which would have seen him hand over the iconic presidential sash.

    The 67-year-old – who is believed to be in Florida – condemned the attack and denied responsibility for encouraging the rioters in a post on Twitter some six hours after violence broke out.

    Speaking before he arrived in Brasilia, Lula said there was “no precedent in the history of our country” for the scenes in Brasilia and called the violence the “acts of vandals and fascists”.

    And he took aim at security forces whom he accused of “incompetence, bad faith or malice” for failing to stop demonstrators accessing Congress.

    “You will see in the images that they [police officers] are guiding people on the walk to Praca dos Tres Powers,” he said. “We are going to find out who the financiers of these vandals who went to Brasilia are and they will all pay with the force of law.”

    Video shared by the Brazilian outlet O Globo showed some officers laughing and taking photos together as demonstrators occupied the congressional campus in the background.

    Brazilian President Lula says Congress invaders will be punished

    Some protesters smashed windows, while others reached the Senate chamber, where they jumped on to seats and used benches as slides.

    Videos on social media show protesters pulling a police officer from his horse and attacking him outside the building.

    Footage broadcast by national media show police detaining dozens of protesters in their yellow jerseys outside the presidential palace.

    Other suspects – whose hands were bound behind their backs – are also seen being led out of the building.

    Protesters had been gathering since the morning on the lawns in front of the parliament and up and down the kilometre of the Esplanada avenue, which is lined with government ministries and national monuments.

    Despite the actions of the protesters, in the hours before the chaos, security had appeared tight, with the roads closed for about a block around the parliament area and armed police pairs guarding every entrance into the area.

    The BBC had seen about 50 police officers around on Sunday morning local time and cars were turned away at entry points, while those entering on foot were frisked by police checking bags.

    Vandals inside a room in the presidential palace
    Image caption,Vandals inside a room in the presidential palace

    Demonstrators were quick to defend their actions when approached by reporters.

    Lima, a 27-year-old production engineer, said: “We need to re-establish order after this fraudulent election.”

    “I’m here for history, for my daughters,” she told AFP news agency.

    Others in the capital expressed outrage at the violence and said the attack marked a sad day for the country.

    “I voted for Bolsanaro but I don’t agree with what they’re doing,” Daniel Lacerda, 21, told the BBC. “If you don’t agree with the president you should just say it and move on, you shouldn’t go hold protests and commit all the violence like they’re doing.”

    And many are drawing comparisons with the storming of the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 by supporters of Donald Trump, an ally of Mr Bolsonaro.

    Bolsonaro supporters vandalising the interior of the presidential palace
    Image caption,Bolsonaro supporters vandalising the interior of the presidential palace

    Bolsonaro supporters created camps in cities across Brazil, some of them outside the military barracks. That is because his most ardent supporters want the military to intervene and make good elections that they say were stolen.

    It looked like their movement had been curbed by Lula’s inauguration – the camps in Brasilia had been dismantled and there was no disruption on the day he was sworn in.

    But Sunday’s scenes show that those predictions were premature.

    According to Katy Watson, the BBC’s South America correspondent, some protesters aren’t just angry that Jair Bolsonaro lost the election – they want President Lula to return to prison. He spent 18 months in jail after being found guilty of corruption in 2017 and his convictions were later annulled, initially he had been sentenced to more than nine years.

    Bolsonaro supporters storm the National Congress in Brasilia, Brazil, 08 January 2023.
    Image caption,Police used tear gas in an attempt to repel protesters

    Leaders from Latin America have condemned the violence:

    • Chilean President Gabriel Boric said Brazil had his country’s “full support in the face of this cowardly and vile attack on democracy”.
    • Colombian President Gustavo Petro said “fascism [had] decided to stage a coup”.
    • Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said Mexico expressed “full support for President Lula’s administration, elected by popular will”.

    US President Joe Biden tweeted: “I condemn the assault on democracy and the peaceful transfer of power in Brazil. Brazil’s democratic institutions have our full support and the will of the Brazilian people must not be undermined.”

    Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz wrote on social media that “the violent attacks on democratic institutions are an attack on democracy that cannot be tolerated,” while French President Emmanuel Macron said the “will of the Brazilian people and the democratic institutions must be respected”. Both have pledged their support to Lula.

    “I condemn any attempt to undermine the peaceful transfer of power and the democratic will of the people of Brazil,” said British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak

    . “President Lula and his government have the United Kingdom’s full support, and I look forward to building on our countries’ close ties in the years ahead.”

    Source: BBC.com
  • Brazil legend, Pele, lying in state in Santos’ stadium

    Brazil legend, Pele, lying in state in Santos’ stadium

    Throughout the night, thousands of mourners lined up to pay their respects to Pele, a legend of Brazil who is buried at the site of his old team Santos.

    Fans lined the streets to enter the stadium as Pele’s coffin was positioned in the middle of the field at the Urbano Caldeira stadium in Sao Paulo.

    The three-time World Cup champion passed away on December 29th at the age of 82.

    At 12:00 GMT on Tuesday, there will be a parade through Santos’ streets to a private family burial.

    “We’re going to ask every country in the world to name one of their football stadiums with the name of Pele,” said Fifa president Gianni Infantino, who attended the memorial.

    Following Pele’s passing, the Brazilian government proclaimed three days of national mourning.

    As the 24-hour vigil comes to an end, the newly elected president of Brazil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, will go to Santos, a city in the state of Sao Paulo, to pay his respects.

    The greatest footballer in history, Pele, had been receiving treatment for colon cancer since 2021.

    ‘There will be no one else like Pele’ – fans pay tribute

    Thousands of fans gathered on the streets as the hearse arrived at the stadium on Monday morning, with some queuing overnight to see the coffin.

    Former Brazil midfielder Ze Roberto and Pele’s son Edinho helped carry his coffin while floral wreaths were sent by Neymar, Vinicius Junior and Real Madrid.

    Beatrice woke up at six in the morning to travel with her husband from the city of Soracaba to Santos, and had been waiting for more than two hours in the queue.

    “I’m determined to pay my final respects to him,” the 56-year-old told the BBC.

    Pele fan Beatrice holding a rose as she queues to see Pele lying in state
    Beatrice queued for more than three hours to see Pele lying in state

    When asked what Pele meant to Brazilians aside from football, Beatrice said he had helped unite modern Brazil, breaking through racist standards in Brazilian society to open the world of football and wider society to black Brazilians.

    Wilson Genio queued with his 13 year old son Miguel, carrying white roses and a family treasure: a Santos Football Club flag personally signed by the legend himself.

    The flag reads: “To the family Genio, your friend Pele”.

    The Genio men had travelled overnight with the hearse carrying Pele’s body from Sao Paolo. “We followed him all the way. We’ve been here since 3.30am,” they said.

    “We could pass another 1,000, 2,000 years and there will no one like Pele. He’s the one and only legend.”

    Santos fans Wilson Genio and his son Miguel proudly pose with their signed Santos flag from Pele
    Wilson Genio and his son Miguel queued to pay their respects with a signed flag from Pele himself

    ‘The whole city is drawn to the stadium’

    The BBC’s Frances Mao in Santos

    It is baking hot- about 30 degrees in Santos, but it feels like the whole city is drawn to the heart of Vila Belmiro stadium where Pele’s coffin lies.

    A steady stream of mourners pass through the centre to pay their final respects – sometimes a smattering of applause breaks out as they pass his coffin. People from all over Brazil – and the outside world – have come. I spot a Mexican flag, a Dutch pin.

    There are several news helicopters buzzing overhead. People are dressed in the striped black-and-white jerseys of the Santos Football Club – Pele’s team – or in Brazilian national team yellow jersey.

    Pele’s voice blasts over the stands in the stadium – his 2006 song “Meu Legado”, meaning My Legacy, is playing on repeat.

    Outside the stadium, a queue of thousands snakes for kilometres across half a dozen city blocks. It is a two-hour wait in the midday sun.

    Men have taken off their shirts to wrap around their heads like bandanas. Others are fanning themselves with the tribute newspaper printed just for the day. Some have come prepared with hats, umbrellas and their tributes.

    Sometimes a Mexican wave ripples through. There are occasional chants of Pele! Rei! But mostly, the crowds are patient in the heat, waiting for their turn to say goodbye.

    The hearse carrying Pele's coffin arrives to Santos as a firework goes off in the early morning
    Hundreds of fireworks were set off on Monday as Pele arrived at Santos’ stadium
    Shirts with Pele's face and number 10 are hung up in the Santos FC stadium
    The city of Santos prepares to say goodbye to its hero Pele, who played 656 competitive matches for the club
    Pele's coffin is carried in front of a Brazilian flag
    Several authorities are expected to attend the memorial, including newly sworn-in Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
    Fans queuing outside Santos football stadium
    Pele’s body will lie in state at Santos’ stadium for 24 hours for the public to pay their respects
    FIFA President Gianni Infantino with Pele's son Edinho
    Fifa president Gianni Infantino attended the memorial
    Mourners stand in line outside Vila Belmiro stadium as they wait to pay their respects to Pele
    Thousands of mourners from all around the world are expected to gather in Santos
  • Fans pay last respect to Pele in stadium at Brazil

    Fans pay last respect to Pele in stadium at Brazil

    On Monday, mourners gathered in line to view Pele’s casket at the Urbano Caldeira Stadium, the longtime home of the Brazilian football legend’s team, Santos.

    The three-time World Cup champion’s coffin left Albert Einstein Hospital in Sao Paulo early on Monday and was taken to the stadium, where he played some of the best matches of his career for the Santos soccer club.

    The club said in a statement that the public would be able to pay their last respects at the stadium in the coastal city outside Sao Paulo.

    Visiting hours were expected to start at 10 am local time and it’s expected to close same time on Tuesday when a private burial ceremony would be held.

    Pele died on Thursday, December 29 at age 82 after a long battle with cancer.

    Pele had a colon tumour removed in September 2021. Neither his family nor the hospital has said whether it had spread to other organs.

    Source: African News

  • Pele’s hearse welcomed by fireworks ahead of wake

    Pele’s hearse welcomed by fireworks ahead of wake

    As Pele’s hearse traveled to the location of the 24-hour public wake that starts on Monday, football fans in Sao Paulo lit fireworks and waved flags in the streets.

    Three-time World Cup champion Pele was placed in hospice care in the beginning of December after his body stopped responding to cancer therapy.

    His passing was reported on Thursday. He was 82.

    After leaving a lasting impression on Brazil and Santos, for whom he scored 643 goals in 659 games over the course of 18 years, tributes have poured in for the football legend.

    Early on Monday morning, his body departed the Albert Einstein Israelite Hospital, where he passed away, in preparation for his wake, which drew throngs of people to say their final goodbyes.

    The public wake will be held at Santos’ Vila Belmiro stadium beginning at 10:00 local time, with Pele’s casket positioned in the middle of the field.

    Fans and dignitaries can pay their respects till Tuesday at 10:00 local time.

    Pele will subsequently be buried in a private ceremony on the ninth level of the Memorial Necropole Ecumenica, a vertical cemetery with a moving view of the Vila Belmiro about half a mile distant, following a procession through the streets of Santos.

  • Brazil prepares to say final goodbye to Pele

    Brazil prepares to say final goodbye to Pele

    The funeral for Brazilian football legend Pelé will be held in the stadium where he competed in some of his best games.

    Edson Arantes do Nascimento, better known as Pelé, passed away on December 29 after a protracted battle with cancer. He was 82.

    The public will be able to pay their final respects at Vila Belmiro Stadium, outside of Sao Paulo, according to Santos, the team where Pele played.

    His mother Celeste, who is 100 years old, will be honored as the coffin is brought through the Santos streets and in front of her house.

    Early on Monday, the casket carrying the three-time World Cup champion will leave Albert Einstein Hospital and be positioned in the field’s center circle.

    From Monday at 10 a.m. to the following day, visitors will be welcome. On Tuesday, alone in the presence of his family, he will be buried at the Memorial Necropole Ecumenica, a vertical cemetery in Santos.

  • ‘Neymar can play the next World Cup’ – Ronaldo backs Brazil talisman to play on after 2022 disappointment

    What happened? The Selecao entered that tournament as favourites to claim a sixth global crown, but their quest for more major honours came to a close at the quarter-final stage when suffering a penalty shootout defeat to Croatia.

    There have been suggestions that Neymar, who is now 30 years of age, may have graced such a stage for the last time, but iconic countryman Ronaldo believes the Paris Saint-Germain forward will add to his haul of 124 caps and pull clear of Pele as his nation’s all-time leading goalscorer.

    What they said: Ronaldo has told AP: “I think Neymar is very upset with the result of the World Cup for the Brazil national team. It’s normal that he’s feeling that way for now, but I’m also sure that he will come back stronger and continue playing with the national team. He’s still young… I think he can play the next World Cup.”

    The bigger picture: Neymar, who has never won a senior international title with Brazil, is level with Pele on 77 goals at the top of a notable scoring chart and Ronaldo sees enough determination in the talented playmaker to suggest that he will want to go on to 2026. The two-time World Cup winner added: “I’m very happy that he showed the world a commitment for the last six months, for the Brazil national team. He behaved himself. He took care of himself. And he played a good match, the first match. He got a very strong tackle on his ankle. He made a huge sacrifice to play again for the national team. He played very good in the last match. I think he’s very important for us. So I hope that [he] gets well soon and back strong in the football world with PSG and the Brazil national team.”

  • Brazil advised to change shirt stars to hearts to celebrate Pele’s World Cup wins

    Brazilian football officials have been urged to replace three of the five stars on their jerseys with hearts as a tribute to Pele by South American football authorities.

    Brazil presently sports five stars on its well-known yellow jerseys to signify their five World Cup victories, which is the most of any other country.

    Pele was a member of the team during three of the World Cup victories, and no other player has scored more goals for Brazil. After scoring his 77th Selecao goal in Friday’s World Cup quarterfinal loss to Croatia, Neymar has now equaled Pele for the record.

    That loss came in the wake of the news that Pele had been hospitalised back home in Sao Paulo, though it was reported the 82-year-old is making “progressive improvement”.

    CONMEBOL, the South American confederation, sent Pele its best wishes while proposing Brazil make an alteration to their kits.

    It said in a statement: “A hundred people gathered this Sunday, December 11, at the CONMEBOL Tree Of Dreams in Doha, Qatar, to honour Edson Arantes do Nascimento, known sportingly as Pele, the only player in soccer history to win three world titles.

    “It is in honour of this unprecedented event that the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL) proposes to the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) that they change three of the five World Cup stars that appear on the chest of their shirt for three hearts, in recognition of Pele.

    “Another central focus of the act was the message of encouragement and great strength to Pele, admitted since November 29 at the Albert Einstein Hospital in Sao Paulo, where he is recovering satisfactorily from a lung infection, according to the doctors.”

    Alejandro Dominguez, the CONMEBOL president, added: “We are on his side in this game that he is playing. It is the right time to pay tribute to him again and let him know that he will live in the heart of anyone who loves football. Our job is for people to continue to know and love Pele.”


  • World Cup: ‘I still haven’t learned to lose’ – Neymar admits

    Neymar has admitted that he “still hurts like hell from loss” as a result of Brazil’s World Cup elimination.

    Favorites entering the tournament Croatia eliminated Brazil from the World Cup 4-2 on penalties after the game had tied 1-1 after extra time.

    Neymar, who scored an outstanding goal in extra time but chose not to take a penalty kick in the 4-2 penalty shootout loss, wrote on Instagram on Saturday that the defeat had left him “psychologically destroyed” and reiterated that sentiment in a second post on Sunday after arriving back in his native country.

    “On Brazilian soil… still hurts like hell from loss, we were so close, so close,” Neymar wrote. “Unfortunately or fortunately I still haven’t learned to lose. Defeats make me stronger, but they hurt me too much and I’m still not used to it.

    “Anyway, we have to move on… life moves us on, even if it hurts and the hurt takes time to heal, we have to move on.

    “Once again I want to thank the Brazilian people for their support and affection. Hearing from you that we fought, delivered until the end comforts a little of our pain.

    “Thank you Qatar for everything. The cup was beautiful and she had to be from Brazil to crown it all, but by God’s destiny it wasn’t.”

     

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    Neymar, 30, has been rumored to be playing in his final World Cup, and after the match he was hesitant to say whether he will continue to play for his nation.

    He added on Instagram: “We keep going… Now it’s to turn off the key, take advantage of family and friends, recharge energies because dealing with this defeat will be very difficult, it still hurts me A LOT! FAITH.”

    Neymar also reserved a special ‘open letter’ post for 61-year-old Brazil head coach Tite, who has stepped down from the role following the World Cup after six-and-a-half years in charge.

    “I knew you as a coach and I already knew you were very good but as a person you are MUCH BETTER!,” Neymar wrote. “I come here to openly thank you for everything, all the teachings you’ve given us… and there were so many.

    “You will always be one of the best coaches I’ve ever had or will have, I will always lift you up. We had beautiful moments but we also had moments that hurt us a lot and the latter will hurt us for a long time.

    “You deserved to be crowned with this cup. We all deserved it for everything we did and for everything we gave up to try to achieve our biggest dream. But God didn’t want it that way, patience. God has given us EVERYTHING!”

     

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  • Brazil approached Guardiola to coach national team – Ronaldo reveals

    Ronaldo stated before Pep Guardiola renewed his contract with Manchester City, the Brazilian national team asked him to become their new coach.

    The Selecao is getting ready for life without Tite, who led them to the World Cup quarterfinals before they lost to Croatia on Friday in a heartbreaking penalty shootout.

    Regardless of how the five-time champions performed in Qatar, the 61-year-old stated in February that he would step down from his position.

    Former Barcelona and Bayern Munich head coach Guardiola decided to prolong his tenure at the Etihad Stadium until 2025, according to legendary striker Ronaldo, who claims the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) had spoken with him.

    “There was interest in Guardiola; it was discussed with Guardiola’s coaching staff, but he preferred to renew his contract with City,” the 2002 World Cup winner said on his YouTube channel.’

    “Perhaps it would be difficult for the CBF to reach an agreement; he is the highest-paid coach in the world.”

    Ronaldo believes the CBF should now turn their attention to the “Brazilian Guardiola” in Fernando Diniz – the Fluminense head coach renowned for his attractive possession-based style of play.

    “Perhaps Diniz would be an attraction for the Brazilian national team,” he added. “He’s a guy who plays well, puts on a show.

    “It is a very important decision for the next cycle. The sooner you present the name and start working on the philosophy of the coach, the better it will be. And we’ll see. I’m curious. I think big names are coming here.”

  • World Cup 2022: Croatia knock out Brazil to reach semis

    Brazil’s hope of winning a sixth World Cup has fallen into the mud after losing to Croatia on penalties in the quarter-finals.

    The Selecao since the start of the 2022 FIFA World Cup have been one of the favourites to win the tournament.

    Unfortunately, their journey has been ended by a determined Croatian side that fought to stay in the quarter-final contest throughout the 120 minutes on Friday, December 9.

    In the game today, neither Brazil nor Croatia did enough to win at the end of the 90 minutes

    After the goalless draw, the game travelled to extra time where both sides managed to score a goal each.

     

    It was Brazil that took the lead in the 105th minute when poster boy Neymar got the ball into the net of Croatia’s net to complete a well-worked team move.

    Unfortunately, for the Samba Boys, they could not hold onto the lead. A strike from Bruno Petković four minutes before the end of the match restored parity to the game.

    At the end of the penalty shootout, Croatia won 4-2 to progress to the semi-finals of the tournament.

    Brazil are out and will have to wait for the next four years to try again for the sixth world title.

  • World Cup 2022: Brazil vs Croatia is the eighth 0-0 after 90 minutes at the tournament

    The tallies were 0-0 seven games beyond the regular ending of the game at the World Cups in 1982, 2006, 2010, and 2014.

    Croatia also drew goalless matches with Belgium and Morocco prior to the first quarterfinal encounter. Denmark and Tunisia, Mexico and Poland, and England and the United States all had scoreless matches.

    Furthermore, Uruguay and South Korea tied 0-0. In the round of 16 encounter between Spain and Morocco, it was likewise deadlocked

    The first 0-0 at a World Cup was a long time coming for the football world. There were two gameswithout a goal after 90 minutes just once, in the sixth round of the 1958 tournament. After 90 minutes of play at the 2018 World Cup in Russia, the score remained 0-0. Denmark and the eventual world winners France were separated without scoring in the group stage. Even after Qatar, the current World Cup record for fewest goals scored will continue.

    After 58 games, 154 goals were scored – 2.75 per game. The 1990 World Cup in Italy holds the negative record. Only 115 goals were scored throughout the tournament – ​​an average of 2.21 goals per game. The record for the highest goal average at a World Cup will probably not be beaten either. When Germany became world champions for the first time in 1954, the ball landed in the net 140 times in 26 games – an average of 5.38 goals per game.

  • Brazilian ship transporting cocaine intercepted  by the French navy in Sierra Leone

    In an operation off the coast of Sierra Leone, a Brazilian vessel carrying more than 4.6 tonnes of cocaine worth over $157.4 million was seized.

    According to Europol, the ship was seized by a French Navy helicopter carrier on November 30, 2022, about 400 miles off the coast of Sierra Leone.

    The NCA, US Drug Enforcement Agency, and Brazilian Federal Police collaborated to uncover and battle criminal networks involved in cocaine trafficking between Brazil, Africa, and Europe. This collaboration resulted in the operation.

    According to EUROPOL, the 21-metre-long Brazilian ship where the drugs were found was sailing toward Europe when it was intercepted.

    “An investigation is underway to identify the criminal groups involved on either side of the Atlantic Ocean,” Europol said in a statement.

    The National Crime Agency reported that the crew, who were all citizens of Brazil, were detained and the cocaine was destroyed. Drug smugglers and sellers have recently traveled often along Sierra Leone’s coast.

    At Freetown’s Queen Elizabeth II Port in July of this year, the Sierra Leone Police allegedly found a 40-foot container with cocaine inside. According to reports, the container was sent from the UK to Sierra Leone.

    When a ship using the flag of Sierra Leone was stopped in Guinean waters carrying almost three tons of cocaine, authorities there held the ship. Recently, many ships were stopped in the waters off Sierra Leone for engaging in unlawful activities.

  • World Cup 2022: Croatia ready to face Brazil – Zlatko Dalic

    Croatian football Manager Zlatko Dalic is optimistic that Croatia is prepared to take on “terrifying favorites” Brazil in their World Cup quarterfinal on Friday.

    During the 2018 World Cup, Dalic’s team advanced three times without extra time before falling to France 4-2 in the championship match.

    Croatia beat Japan in the last 16 on Monday on penalties following a 1-1 draw after extra time.

    “Brazil is the favourite, let’s face it,” Dalic said.

    “Brazil is the most powerful and the best national team at the World Cup. What I’ve seen so far, when you take a look at their selection of players, their quality, skills and value, then it is indeed terrifying.

     

    “I think we have a great exam ahead of us, a tough task against the team which plays great soccer with so many good quality and fast players.”

    Dalic added that Croatia, ranked 12th in the world, winning the knock-out match would not be a huge upset.

    “I think we have nothing to fear,” Dalic said. “We need to enter the match with much faith, self-confidence and looking for our chances, enjoy the occasion of playing Brazil, that’s it. [It’s] too early, if only it were the final.

    “It is a great team, but I believe that we can challenge them, we need to be smart … The match is not 50-50, but we are also not outsiders.”

    Croatia would face Argentina or the Netherlands in the semi-finals if they beat Brazil.

  • World Cup 2022: Round of 16 draw, dates and venues

    Four last-16 games remain, but Netherlands, Argentina, France, and England have already secured their places in the World Cup quarterfinals.

    On Monday, Brazil will face South Korea and surprise package Japan will play Croatia.

    The round concludes later that day when Cristiano Ronaldo will try to motivate Portugal to victory over Switzerland. On Tuesday, group G champions Morocco face off against Spain.

    Qatar 2022 World Cup round of 16 fixtures

    The elimination round began with Netherlands easily defeating the United States 3-1.

    The South Americans defeated Australia 2-1 thanks to Lionel Messi, and Louis van Gaal’s team will now play them in the round of eight.

    In addition to France’s victory over Poland and England’s 3-0 victory over Senegal, which came after some tense first-half moments, set up a matchup with Les Bleus. Olivier Groud became France’s all-time leading scorer.

    Check out the key information for all the last-16 fixtures below.

    Saturday, December 3

    Netherlands 3-1 United States (Khalifa International Stadium, Al Rayyan)

    Argentina 2-1 Australia (Ahmad bin Ali Stadium, Al Rayyan) 

    Sunday, December 4

    France 3-1 Poland (Al Thumama Stadium, Doha) 

    England 3-0 Senegal (Al Bayt Stadium, Al Khor) 

    Monday, December 5

    Japan vs Croatia (Al Janoub Stadium, Al Wakrah, 3pm, BBC One) 

    Brazil vs South Korea (Stadium 974, Doha, 7pm, ITV1) 

    Tuesday, December 6

    Morocco vs Spain (Education City Stadium, Al Rayyan, 3pm, ITV1) 

    Portugal vs Switzerland (Lusail Iconic Stadium, Lusail, 7pm, ITV1) 

    Quarter-finals: Friday, December 9 and Saturday, December 10

    Semi-finals: Tuesday, December 13 and Wednesday, December 14

    Third-place play-off: Saturday, December 17

    Final: Sunday, December 18

    All kick-off times are GMT.

  • Neymar in line to return for Brazil against South Korea

    Neymar has resumed training in preparation for Brazil’s World Cup match against South Korea, and if the team’s medical staff gives him the all-clear, he will play.

    Since the Selecao’s 2-0 victory against Serbia in their opening Group G match, Brazil’s talisman has been absent from action in Qatar.

    Neymar left that game early due to an ankle injury, making him unavailable for the remainder of the group stage.

    The 30-year-old posted images from his return to training on social media on Saturday, along with the caption “I feel good, I knew that I would now”, and it was confirmed in Brazil’s pre-match press conference that Neymar will be available as long as he comes through a session unscathed on Sunday.

    “Neymar’s going to practice today,” Brazil coach Tite said.

    “If he practices okay then he will be playing. There’s a specific training today. He will practice and if everything is okay, he will play.”

    Tite insisted, however, the final call will be with Brazil’s medical experts.

    “We play a price to be the best, we want to be at our most competent but we never put health at risk,” Tite added when asked if Neymar would start if he came through the training session without any issues.

    “Neymar being in the line-up depends on the medical department clearing it.

    “I prefer to use my best from the start. Myself, as a head coach I have to take that responsibility, and that is my preference.”

    Tite also confirmed Danilo is available for selection, though Alex Sandro is not. Gabriel Jesus and Alex Telles, meanwhile, have been ruled out of the remainder of the tournament.

     

  • Brazil waiting on Neymar news as Tite dismisses idea of ‘easy’ draw

    Tite advised Brazil to use extreme caution during the World Cup’s knockout round, when they would like Neymar to return from injury.

    The Selecao finished first in Group G after losing 1-0 to Cameroon on Friday. As a result, they will play South Korea rather than Portugal in the next round.

    Brazil would now play the winner of Japan’s match against Croatia in the quarterfinals after Spain’s defeat the day before appeared to further open up the draw.

    Neymar has not yet exercised with a ball after his matchday one injury, but Brazil will feel more at ease regardless of their opponents once he returns to play.

    Team doctor Rodrigo Lasmar added: “With 72 hours before the next match, we have time on our side. We still have possibilities.”

    With or without his star man, coach Tite certainly will not become complacent, explaining: “Brazil lost to Cameroon. Portugal lost to South Korea. France lost to Tunisia. Argentina lost to Saudi Arabia. I think the results speak for themselves.

    “I think these are very strong, very tough matches. I don’t think we can think any prior situation makes it easy. We need to be very careful.

    “We were very careful with the match against Cameroon. We were. We had all of those cares, we took them. They had their merits, played vertically very well. They have merit for the victory like Tunisia and the others.

    “We can’t say it’s easier and we have an advantage. We can’t say that.”

    Tite had made nine changes to his Brazil team, selecting an entirely different XI to that which started their finals opener.

    But he said: “Who lost? All of us. Our preparation is joint preparation, our wins are joint wins, our losses are also joint losses.”

    The coach called on Brazil to “feel the loss”, saying: “The World Cup doesn’t give you a second chance, but this time it did.

    “We have to concentrate for 24 hours, suffer for 24 hours, and tomorrow we start getting ready.”

    Aside from Neymar’s development, there was conflicting news on his injuries, with Alex Sandro continuing to rehabilitate alongside the striker while Danilo is expected to practice regularly on Saturday.

    This is a timely boost because Alex Telles and Gabriel Jesus’ knee injuries from the match against Cameroon will soon be subject to scans.

  • World Cup: Historic Brazil win fails to save Cameroon

    Despite being the first African team to defeat Brazil during the tournament, Cameroon was eliminated from Group G, and after their first two World Cup performances, Rigobert Song voiced sadness.

    In order to have any chance of joining the pre-tournament favorites in the round of 16, Cameroon needed to defeat them on Friday.

    They did it in thrilling fashion thanks to a goal from Vincent Aboubakar in stoppage time, which he celebrated by taking off his shirt.

    However, Murat Yakin’s team finished two points ahead of Cameroon thanks to Switzerland’s stunning 3-2 victory against Serbia, sending them home after the World Cup’s group stage for the sixth time in a row.

    By breaking Brazil‘s unblemished World Cup record against African teams (previously played seven, won seven), the Indomitable Lions at least left on a good note, but Song believed Cameroon might have done better.

    “I didn’t even realise that this was such a historic victory. We are one of the African countries who have played more World Cups than most, and now we’ve beaten Brazil,” Song said.

    “My players deserve to be congratulated. They showed tonight they could have done better in the first two games [a 1-0 defeat to Switzerland and a 3-3 draw with Serbia].

    “I think we do have a feeling of regret. Now we realise we could have done better. But we need to look on the positive side as well.

    “I’m trying to get across a team spirit, that lion’s spirit, which needs to be the key to Cameroon teams.

    “We realise now we could have done better in this tournament. We’re a young team and today we’ve seen our young team getting stronger and stronger.”

    Cameroon began 2022 by finishing third at the Africa Cup of Nations on home soil, and with just over a year to prepare for the next edition of that tournament – which was pushed back to January 2024 due to weather concerns in Ivory Coast, Song is backing them to improve further.

    “There’s another tournament in 2024 and we’ve built up some momentum now,” Song added.

    “I’m satisfied with tonight’s performance. I took over the national team not too long ago and I think we are progressing and improving, so I’m proud of this team.”
  • Brazil legend Pele says hospital admission just a ‘monthly visit’

    Pele has taken action to reassure the public that his most recent hospital stay was only a “monthly visit.”

    The three-time World Cup champion, who is considered one of the best players ever, has been receiving medical attention at home in Brazil.

    Last year, Pele had surgery to remove a tumor from his colon, and ever since, he has been in and out of the hospital.

    Following his admission earlier this week, his daughter Kely Nascimento stated on Wednesday that there was “no surprise or emergency” regarding her father’s hospitalization.

    The Brazilian men’s team competing in the World Cup in Qatar delivered an encouraging message to the 82-year-old.

    Pele took to Instagram to show his gratitude for the support, sharing a picture of a building in Qatar with his image and the words “get well soon” lit up.

    “Friends, I am at the hospital making my monthly visit,” he wrote. “It’s always nice to receive positive messages like this. Thanks to Qatar for this tribute, and to everyone who sends me good vibes.”

     

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  • Alves, 39, to be Brazil’s oldest World Cup captain

    Brazil have already qualified for the last 16 with top spot in Group G guaranteed if they avoid defeat.

    Alves said: “For me, it represents the fact that I can wear the Brazil jersey. It makes me very proud to be here.”

    The former Barcelona defender has recovered from a knee injury to compete at his third World Cup.

    “I’ve been with the Brazilian squad for many years and to be able to wrap up this cycle, playing a Brazil have already qualified for the last 16 with top spot in Group G guaranteed if they avoid defeat., makes me very happy,” added Alves, who made his international debut in 2006.

    “It’s been 16 years with the national squad and I’ve tried to do my very best. Life, I think, always rewards the people who love what they do, who truly do their best in the mission.

    “I think I’m reaping what I have planted over those 16 years.”

    Tite insisted he was not yet focused on the knockout stage, despite the anticipated changes.

    “We have 26 great players and I do not have time to be focusing on the broader picture,” he said.

    “We’ll make a few changes, we’ll include keys players. In two games we used 19 players. We do not call them starting players or reserves, they are all players.”

    Cameroon, who came back from two goals down in their previous game against Serbia to draw 3-3, must win and hope Switzerland fail to beat Serbia in order to go through.

    Head coach Rigobert Song said: “With regards to what is at stake tomorrow, we know the Brazilian squad off by heart.

    “But we aren’t worrying about what they’re going to bring to the game, it’s about what we bring to the game.

    “I don’t really care about what they’re going to do, it’s about us. We are preparing as if we’re playing a final.”

     

    MATCH STATS

    • Brazil have won both previous World Cup games between themselves and Cameroon – 3-0 in 1994 and 4-1 in 2014.
    • Brazil have won all seven of their FIFA World Cup matches against African sides, scoring 20 goals and conceding just twice.
    • A defeat or draw for Cameroon will see them eliminated from the group stage of the World Cup in their sixth successive appearance at the finals, last reaching the knockout rounds in 1990. They’ve never won their final group stage game in seven previous appearances at the World Cup (D2 L5).
    • Brazil are yet to face a single shot on target at the 2022 World Cup, the first team to not face a shot on target in their first two games at a tournament since France in 1998.

    CHRIS SUTTON’S PREDICTION

    We’ve seen Serbia and Switzerland focus on keeping Brazil out and they both managed it for a while.

    The difference is Cameroon need to win this game to have a chance of staying in the tournament.

    Brazil might make a few changes now they are through, but if Cameroon open up and play expansive football against them, things are only going to go one way.

    Source: BBC

  • Neymar’s father predicts star to ‘back to his best’ in time for World Cup final

    According to Neymar’s father, the Brazilian superstar will be “back to his best” in time for the World Cup championship game.

    After defeating Switzerland and Serbia in their opening two games in Qatar, the Selecao has already advanced to the round of 16 and only needs a point to take top place in their group.

    Neymar was forced to sit out until the knockout rounds due to an ankle injury he sustained during the matchday one triumph over Serbia.

    Despite Neymar’s uncertain return date, Brazil are still among the favorites to win the competition.

    The forward, though, will reportedly return in plenty of time for the World Cup final, provided Brazil advances that far. He is just two goals shy from tying Pele’s record total of 77 goals for Brazil.

    The most crucial factor is that he can return to the field and perform at his top, Neymar Sr remarked in an interview with talkSPORT through an interpreter.

    “When he was injured before and he came back again he was at his best. He will do his best.

    “Everyone knows Neymar is very important, a great influence on the field and [on] all his colleagues. When Neymar is on the field it’s totally different because he’s number one. We know Neymar’s importance to the group.

    “I believe Neymar will be in the field again in the final match and he’ll do his best to win the World Cup together with his colleagues in the Brazilian team.

    “He’ll do his best to help them and together win the competition.”

    Brazil face Cameroon in their final group game. They will meet the still undecided Group H runners-up if they do finish top.

    The Selecao are aiming to win the tournament for the first time since 2002.

  • Brazil: Deadly landslide engulfs motorway

    A landslide on a southern Brazilian highway has killed at least two people and left dozens missing.

    Authorities said a torrent of mud fell on the BR-376 highway in the state of Paraná, damaging more than 21 vehicles.

    Rescue workers on the scene said the search was complicated by bad weather and the remote location.

    A thermal camera is being used by firefighters to locate possible survivors. Up to 30 people are still believed to be missing.

    An aerial view shows a landslide in BR-376 federal road after heavy rains in Guaratuba, Parana state, Brazil November 29, 2022.
    IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS Image caption, At least 15 cars and six lorries were engulfed in the mudslide.

    Aerial footage shows one lorry precariously hanging over the side of a bridge. Rescue workers found the body of its driver, who was identified as 62-year-old João Pires.

    A relative said he had worked as a lorry driver for most of his life and was well acquainted with the road where the accident happened.

    The name of the second victim has not yet been released.

    Another lorry driver whose cab was buried in the mud was rescued with only minor injuries. José Altair Biscaia, 43, recorded a video of himself on his phone as he was trapped.

    “I’m alive, thank God. I’m in the middle of the mud, just in a little corner which is left of the lorry. I’m full of cuts. but I’m alive,” he can be heard saying in the footage.

    The inside of his cab looks mangled and there are blood stains. Outside the window there appears to be a wall of solid mud.

    So far, six survivors have been located. Among them is the mayor of the coastal town of Guaratuba, Roberto Justus.

    In a video uploaded to social media after his rescue, Mr Justus said it was “a miracle” he was alive.

    “It was horrible,” he said. “The mountain just fell on top of us. It swept away every last car.”

    He told local radio station Rádio Gaúcha that he and his driver, Cláudio Margarida, had broken the windows of their car to get out.

    “A sea of mud, trees, branches hit the door of the car. I was on the passenger seat and the impact was such that our car was lifted. The mud kept coming and coming and lifting us until we were on top of the vehicles on the opposite carriageway,” he recalled.

    The mudslide was triggered by days of heavy rain in Paraná.

    Landslides are not uncommon in Brazil and hillside communities are often swept away when sodden mountainsides collapse.

    In February, more than 200 people were killed in landslides in the town of Petrópolis in Rio state.

     

  • Luis Enrique prepared should Spain end up facing Brazil

    Luis Enrique insists that Spain won’t take any dangers by attempting to orchestrate a certain outcome against Japan in order to avoid playing Brazil in the World Cup quarterfinals.

    La Roja takes on Samurai Blue on Thursday knowing that a win will guarantee the group’s top rank and set up a matchup with the Group F runners-up in the round of 16.

    However, it would also put them in position to face the Selecao in the round of eight.

    Attempting to avoid Brazil has been a hot issue throughout Spain’s recent media appearances, and Luis Enrique even acknowledged talking about it with his team.

    “Great question, we’ve wondered about this and reflected on it. From a professional point of view, we are only thinking of winning because the four teams can qualify,” he said.

    “We want to be first, we cannot and should not speculate. It’s very human to talk about it, we have done it, but it’s useless to choose.

    “Imagine, we reach minute 95, we are drawing 0-0, we are winners of the group. But then just before full-time, Costa Rica and Japan score. You’ve speculated the entire game and then in the last 15 seconds you concede. That’s it, you’re out.

    “If you’re convinced your team is a good one [you try to win]. We’re here to win seven games.

    “Your theory is Brazil [in the quarter-finals]. Let’s play Brazil. We can’t start with these estimations.

    “We try to put up a fight – it doesn’t matter who we’re playing in the round of 16 or quarter-finals.

    “If we play Brazil in the quarters, well so be it… We must beat Japan – elite sport and speculation don’t compute, or we don’t understand it that way. Being first would mean that we have been better.

    “To win a World Cup you have to win against everyone who comes your way. That’s our goal.”

    In fact, Luis Enrique continued by saying he would enjoy playing Brazil in the quarterfinals, even if it meant La Roja had a more difficult path to the championship game.

    “I hope to play against Brazil. It will mean that we have both reached the quarter-finals,” he continued.

    “Brazil is always a clear favourite [for the World Cup], regardless of the year. They have so much talent and quality, both individually and collectively.

    “As for everyone else [the favourites], there aren’t big surprises. I always stick to the FIFA rankings, you can see which are the favourites. You look at the top 10, some aren’t here but generally those are the favourites. Brazil, France won [their groups] easily, so there’s no surprises.”

    Spain have generally impressed across their first two games with their vibrant and attack-minded style of play, with many considering them early favourites despite possessing one of the youngest squads.

    But one of their young talents who is yet to make an appearance is Ansu Fati, who some felt was fortunate to even be named in the squad after only playing bit-part role for Barcelona this season on his return from injury.

    Luis Enrique acknowledged Fati was the most uncertain selection in the group, but he stressed he was thrilled with the training level of all of his forwards.

    “He was the last player to enter the list. He wasn’t even in the squad in the previous two international breaks. It might be the position where I had the most doubts, regarding bringing Ansu or another player.

    “I have to base my decisions on training. We have eight forwards training so well, I am delighted with them, they are flying. It’s a shame they’ve not all had minutes, they all deserve to play and it hurts me, but there’s no space for everyone – some will not play.

    “There’s five substitutes allowed, and some players will end the competition without playing a minute. I’m sorry about that, so sorry, but they have to keep training at a top level and I make decisions based on what I see. I am sorry, but also happy with what I see from those eight players.”