koclokindoblog, 29 maret 2012, 
Preparations for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil took a further step forward on Wednesday.
Government  officials passed a bill that provides the legal framework for the  tournament and lifts the nationwide ban on sales of alcohol in football  stadiums.
However, the so-called World Cup bill, which also  includes the allocation of discounted tickets to students, pensioners  and indigenous people and creates regulations for the sale of FIFA,  still needs to be debated in the Senate.
The vote in favour of the bill has been long-delayed in Congress, with lawmakers arguing it gives FIFA too much power.
It  forced President Dilma Rousseff to bow to pressure on a number of  controversial issues in hope of easing tensions in congress with a  little over two years until kick off in Sao Paulo.
Passing of the  bill, which also covers the curtain-raising 2013 Confederations Cup, may  go some way to help manage strained ties between the Brazilian  government and FIFA whose secretary-general Jerome Valcke reportedly  said tournament organisers needed "a kick up the backside".
Valcke  apologised soon after and both sides have since improved relations, but  FIFA executives remain alarmed that the lack of urgency in Brazil over  transport and key infrastructure will prove disruptive for thousands of  fans.
The sale of all alcoholic beverages was banned in Brazilian  football stadiums in 2003 in an effort to curb fan violence, however  FIFA is determined to serve beer at the 2014 World Cup and honour its  sponsorship agreements with Budweiser Anheuser-Busch.
The  2014 World Cup will return to South America for the first time since  Argentina hosted the tournament in 1978 and to Brazil for the first time  since 1950.
soccerway.com 

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