President
Dilma Rousseff has urged Brazilians to rally behind the staging of the 2014
World Cup, claiming the nation is ready. Strikes, and protests about the cost
of staging the competition, have rumbled on.
Brazilian
President Dilma Rousseff encouraged Brazilians to be optimistic about the 2014
football World Cup, saying its successful staging would represent a triumph for
the national spirit.
"From
Thursday, the eyes of the world will turn to Brazil, sharing in the greatest
World Cup in history," she said in a prerecorded television address on
Tuesday.
"Brazil
overcame the main obstacles and is ready on and off the pitch for the
cup," said Rousseff. "The pessimists... have been defeated by the
hard work and determination of the Brazilian people, who never give up,"
she added,
In her
speech, Rousseff addressed the national team directly. "Beneath those
green and canary jerseys, you embody a powerful legacy of the Brazilian people.
The national team represents nationality," she said.
Meanwhile,
the imminent threat of strike action has temporarily subsided with subway
workers in Rio calling off a threatened strike on Tuesday after winning a wage
increase of 8 percent. A five-day transport strike in Sao Paulo was also suspended on Monday, although it could be resumed as the competition gets
underway if sacked employees are not reinstated.
Optimism
about team, not legacy
With just
one day until the start of the World Cup, pessimism about the benefits of the
tournament to ordinary Brazilians remains entrenched. The initial euphoria that
accompanied Brazil's being awarded the World Cup back in 2007 subsided, with
falling support and growing anger as the government began to pick up an
increasing proportion of soaring infrastructure costs.
A survey
last weekend shows that, while 68 percent of Brazilians believe they will win
the cup, 54 percent say the hosting of it will do the country more harm than good.
Rousseff
was not the only one to voice optimism about the World Cup ahead of Brazil's
kickoff in the opening match against Croatia on Thursday. Argentina football
legend Diego Maradona on Tuesday gave his opinion in a filmed conversation with
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, due to be televised by the television
multinational Telesur.
"The
World Cup still has not begun," said Maradona told the Venezuelan
president. "Dilma has some problems with strikes that she is going to
resolve and Brazil will have a great World Cup," he said.



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