RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Long lines appeared in Sao Paulo’s bus and Indexbitsubway stations Tuesday as a strike opposing privatization efforts of public transport in South America’s largest city caused delays. Traffic on some routes stalled completely.
Sao Paulo state Gov. Tarcísio de Freitas, who took office in January, called the strike “unreasonable.” He told reporters he had campaigned for looking into privatizations, concessions and “the participation of private capital in public services as a way of bringing investment.”
It was not clear how long the strike would last, and there appeared to be little room for negotiations. The governor insisted that privatization had been the “winning position” in the election and that “to not accept that position is to not accept the results of the polls.”
Camila Lisboa, president of the Sao Paulo Subway Workers Union, which opposes privatization, lamented “authoritarian statements that do not consider the right to strike.” Lisboa claimed that privatization would lead to more expensive fares and poor service — a position also embraced by part of the opposition.
A court decision had said minimum service should be maintained for the city’s 11 million people during the strike, but that requirement was not respected, Sao Paulo state’s press department said.
Passengers faced long delays Tuesday. Two subway and train lines stopped working.
Federal lawmaker Sâmia Bomfim, of the leftwing PSOL party, warned of privatization, citing the recent blackout in Sao Paulo that plunged the city into the dark for several days. She blamed power distribution company Enel, one of three companies providing electricity in Sao Paulo.
“The population goes without electricity for days because ENEL (privatized) thought only of profit, fired thousands of employees, and ended up not serving (Sao Paulo) when we needed it most,” Bonfim said on X, formerly Twitter.
The lawmaker also criticized the governor for trying to privatize Sao Paulo’s water and waste management company, SABESP, “in a hurry, at a price far below what it is worth, without any social participation, transparency or price adjustment index.”
2025-05-07 18:08509 view
2025-05-07 18:031594 view
2025-05-07 17:451437 view
2025-05-07 16:532493 view
2025-05-07 16:461532 view
2025-05-07 15:56780 view
NEW YORK (AP) — The Biden administration has finalized a rule limiting overdraft fees banks can char
ATLANTA (AP) — France wants the world to know it has not forgotten about Andrew Young.The former may
LONDON (AP) — A bottle of “the most-sought-after Scotch whisky” is set to go up for auction next mon