Brazil carnival suspended
Brazil carnival suspended

Brazil carnival suspended

Authorities have suspended carnival festivities in the Brazilian city of Paraty after gunfire killed one person and injured nine others. The mayor’s office of the seaside city says a man opened fire in a central plaza during the Bloco da Lama, or Mud Street Party, killing a 21-year-old man and injuring nine others. Police are searching for the shooter. City officials met with carnival representatives and decided to suspend festivities this past Sunday. They did not say if they would be allowed to resume on Monday and Tuesday. A statement from the municipality called the decision “an act against violence and to promote peace”. As locals and tourists alike, some scantily clad in hot and humid conditions, danced their hearts out, violence put a dampener on proceedings in three other cities holding their own festivities. In Sao Paulo, web news portal G1 quoted police as saying a man was stabbed to death at a street fest late Saturday, CBN radio reported. Another shooting saw one person hurt in the northern city of Salvador, which hosts one of Brazil’s most spectacular carnivals. In Rio, the urban violence that so often scars the life of the city of more than six million has faded into the distance, at least for five days of festivities that began this past Friday and drew more than a million people Saturday to street parties. Huge crowds descended on Ipanema Beach to watch some of their most popular groups. Although the atmosphere has been joyful, Rio authorities have deployed 15 000 police just in case emotions boil over amid the heat mixed with alcohol. Cordao da Bola Preta, Rio’s oldest street group, had hoped to attract as many as two million people on Saturday. But Globo newspaper reported that only about a million attended, with the venue shifted slightly owing to pre-Olympic roadwork. “I’m not sure the figures are right - but in recent years, carnival has grown so much maybe there’s nowhere else for it to go,” said Luiz Benevides, a 39-year-old drummer with a top musical group playing Beatles songs with a samba flavour. “Street parties are the best thing that could ever happen to carnival. I have stopped watching the main parades as they are now so commercialised - though maybe the street versions will go the same way.” After Sunday and yesterday night’s elite parades, the jurors will elect the winners ahead of next Saturday’s Parade of Champions. A panel of judges will run the rule over the dancers and massed ranks of percussionists as well as their spectacular floats before determining who takes the crown worn currently by the Unidos da Tijuca school. The main parades are the culmination of months of preparations. “The excitement builds and builds. Then it’s your school’s turn to go and there you are, under the lights, the noise. It’s an indescribable feeling,” said Megumi Kudo, a Japanese-born solo dancer. The first record of carnival celebrations dates back to 1723 - but the first samba school was not formed until 1928. Other cities, notably Sao Paulo and the northeastern cities of Salvador and Recife, are also engaged in their own spectacular festivities. This year’s carnival comes after a difficult year for Brazil, whose economy is facing zero growth this year while flagship oil firm Petrobras is mired in a huge corruption scandal. BRAZIL NAMPA/AFP

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Namibian Sun 2025-03-04

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