Women take to the streets in Brazil against coup
Tele-SUR, via Facebook
Women
are rising up against the sexist coup government in Brazil! Tens of
thousands of, mostly, women took to the streets in at least 5 major
cities across Brazil to express outrage over the coup government of
Michel Temer that announced very sexist and neoliberal plans after
ousting the left-wing female President Dilma Rousseff.
Led
by women student groups, feminist organizations and trade unions,
people of all age groups and ethnicities in Rio de Janeiro, Sao
Paulo, San Salvador, Belo Horizonte, and Porto Alegre blocked traffic
and shouted slogans including “Temer coup-monger” and “Out with
Temer” against the newly-installed conservative leader.
In
the very first hours after being installed, the new coup government
swore in 22 cabinet minister, all of them white and male, the first
time since the 1970s that no women have been in the cabinet. Rousseff
had 15 female minister during her government.
Also
the Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Women, Racial Equality
and Human Rights were shut down, in a country that is dealing with
severe problems of sexism, racism and human rights violations.
Protester
Gabriella: "This is the answer to the government, who tries to
tear up our constitution and propose such a giant step backwards for
women, minorities and social programs. And it's only the beginning.
We say: no step back!"
Protester
Raissa: "The most chauvinistic government since the military
dictatorship will feel the power of women. We will not shut up. We
will not bow down. If they thought they buried us, they were wrong.
We are seeds that will be giving fruit for the entire country. Today
we occupy the streets, tomorrow we take back the government."
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