| Demonstrators set up road blocks out the Rio state assembly |
Roman Catholic authorities in the
Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro have promised an inquiry after riot
police fired rubber bullets from a church.
Many protesters were public workers who have not been paid in months.
| Police fired on protesters from inside a church |
| Fencing was kicked down to build a barricade |
| Several protesters were injured in the clashes |
| Police fired rubber bullets in response |
'Clinging to their luxuries'
Speaking during the protests, a spokesman for the Oil Workers' Union in Rio, Ronaldo Moreno, said people were angry at those in power. "As you can see here in Brazil, we have thieves coming and going in government, in the state government, in the federal government, in congress," he told the Associated Press."So the people can't stand it anymore. What is happening today is a fight by public workers but it is a fight by everyone. A fight against this corruption, these criminals, these politicians who are in the legislative assembly and don't want to let go.
They only vote against the people. They don't want to get rid of their luxuries." A number of protests have been held outside the assembly in recent weeks against the planned budget cuts, but Tuesday's events has been the most violent so far, the BBC's Julia Carneiro reports from Rio.
Last month the federal government froze Rio's accounts, ordering the state to pay unpaid debt amounting to millions of dollars.
The state declared a financial emergency ahead of the Rio Olympics earlier this year, saying it did not have the funds to provide security for the Games and to finish a metro line.