VIDEO: AcCor TV HoTeLs Barraco 3 Brazil
The Mercure Florianópolis Convention hotel (previously the Mercure FLN Itacorubi) is on the Admar Gonzaga highway in the Itacorubi distric
Mercure Florianopolis Convention (Brazil) - Hotel Reviews
AcCoR TV not Accor
Bressols. Malgré le vandalisme, Ibis Récup multiplie ses créations ici, vêtements et objets retrouvent une deuxième vie
IBIS oh yeah! new funny advertising (by TVhotelnews)
Bressols. Malgré le vandalisme, Ibis Récup multiplie ses créations
ici, vêtements et objets retrouvent une deuxième vie @accorhotelsfr_
Red Lobster & Darden Restaurants — See. Workers. Differently. (SPOOF VIDEO) (by ROCUnited1)
Workers at all Darden Restaurants - from Red Lobster, to Olive Garden, to Capital Grille - deserve decent working conditions, including paid sick days and fair wages. SIGN THE PETITION AT http://bit.ly/dignityatdarden — Support the campaign for Dignity at Darden!
Want to get involved? Go to http://www.dignityatdarden.org
Alexia Twister - Blue Space - 12/01/2013 (HD - By Alan Junior) (by fotografo20004)
BREAKING NEWS!! Accor Lodging Group is buying 15 hotels part of Grupo Posadas’s large portfolio of hotels in Latin America. The hotels which are being bought are in Brazil and elsewhere in South America and are part of the Caesar Park and Caesar Business brands which Accor will also be acquiring in this $275 million acquisition. I had a chance to work with Grupo Posadas during the summer of 2010 so this is very exciting news for me!
Hosting the 2016 Olympics and emerging as an economic powerhouse, Brazil is headed swiftly toward a more prominent place on the world stage. But the country can’t shake off an epidemic more indicative of smaller, often poverty-stricken nations: pervasive violence against LGBT people. Transgender Europe’s Trans Murder Monitoring project in November revealed that among the 265 murders of trans people reported globally in the preceding 12 months, 126 of them were in Brazil, the largest number of any country. It was the only country with triple digits (notoriously biased Pakistan had five reported killings, for example), and according to the monitoring project, it’s only getting worse. In 2008, 57 trans killings were reported in Brazil.
A well-publicized 2011 report from the gay rights organization Grupo Gay da Bahía found attacks and murders on the rise; LGBT people were being bashed once every 36 hours. And last fall at least 15 gay activists in Curitiba, a prominent southern city, received death threats. “You are going to die, you, your husband, and your son. Your mother is a dyke,” was the phone message left for Toni Reis, president of the Brazilian Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transvestite, and Transsexual Association.
But unlike those in Jamaica, Russia, or Uganda, officials in Brazil are working to curb homophobic violence. After Reis and the other activists reported the disturbing phone calls and emails, the Human Rights Secretariat of Brazil sent several of its people to Curitiba to interview those threatened. The national officials met with local law enforcement, which set up a special committee to investigate the threats (no one’s been arrested yet). Meanwhile, the federal government operates a 24-hour national telephone service for LGBT people to report violence and discrimination, and the federal government is forming “pacts” with the 27 state governments to stem homophobia, which Reis says derives from Christian sources.
“Religious intolerance among some evangelical groups against LGBT people is increasing,” he says, adding that many church leaders actively lobby politicians against gay rights.
Evangelical Protestants, especially, have pushed back against efforts by the Brazilian government to protect the nation’s LGBT people. Last year, even before the Grupo Gay da Bahía report made international headlines, liberal legislators introduced a bill to outlaw anti-LGBT bias, providing jail time for those discriminating or inciting violence against LGBT people. Conservative Christians said the legislation would make it impossible for them to preach against homosexuality, and the bill was watered down as a result of their efforts. Even with many gay-supportive government leaders, Reis admits, “Progress is slow and impunity continues to reign.”
Wonderful World BBC One VIDEO Universo em movimento - legendado: ingles portugues Favoritos TV Bombinhas Sapo videos @bellalunatv



