Sunday Star-Times

Carnival cuts loose despite mourning

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BRAZIL’S CARNIVAL celebratio­ns cut loose on Friday, but the parades, block parties and overall festivitie­s began under the pall of a recent nightclub fire that killed 238 people in the southern city of Santa Maria.

Even as the mayor of Rio de Janeiro handed over the keys of the city to King Momo, the ceremonial figurehead of Brazil’s best-known Carnival celebratio­ns, the mourning continued.

President Dilma Rousseff attended a mass in honour of the fire victims at the cathedral in Brasilia, the capital, on Thursday night.

She will spend the five-day holiday in the northeaste­rn state of Bahia, where a blackout late Thursday darkened the capital city of Salvador ahead of the revelry there. Her press office said she would not participat­e in any of it.

Most of the show, of course, will go on.

Psy, the Korean pop star whose Gangnam Style single with its signature dance moves has made him a global phenomenon, was scheduled to sing in the massive street parties in Salvador, Brazil’s third-biggest city. Other Brazilian and foreign celebritie­s, including American actress Megan Fox, were expected to enliven celebratio­ns in Rio and elsewhere.

Carnival is the consummate Brazilian holiday ahead of the Catholic season of Lent. The annual event lures millions of locals and tourists to parties across the country. Rio alone is expected to attract 900,000 tourists and generate $665 million for the local economy this year. But with 65 survivors from the fire still hospitalis­ed, national media and private conversati­ons were full of sombre reflection. Dozens of cities, most of them near where the January 27 nightclub disaster occurred, cancelled or toned down some of the festivitie­s.

Hundreds of nightclubs and other venues remain shuttered after municipal authoritie­s nationwide moved to crack down on lax enforcemen­t of safety codes, one of several factors that investigat­ors say led to the tragedy in Santa Maria.

Gaudencio Torquato, a columnist writing in the Estado de S Paulo newspaper, last week compared Brazil to a ‘‘see-saw,’’ a country where emotional ‘‘highs and lows relieve each other without interrupti­on.’’

Dozens of cities, most of them near where the nightclub disaster occurred, cancelled or toned down some of the festivitie­s.

It’s hardly the first time Carnival has been affected by troubling circumstan­ces.

Last year, celebratio­ns in Salvador were dampened by a police strike that led to a crime spree and at least 150 murders. Police in Rio briefly struck as well.

This year, dozens of arson attacks have rattled the state of Santa Catarina, also in Brazil’s south. Police believe the attacks are the work of criminal gangs protesting prison conditions.

A power outage in Salvador on Thursday night followed several big blackouts that have dimmed parts of Brazil in recent months.

The electricit­y problems, coupled with longstandi­ng complaints over the poor state of roads, ports and airports, have led to growing concerns about Brazil’s ability to host the World Cup of soccer next year and the 2016 Olympics in Rio.

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