- Source: 1999 in Brazil
Events in the year 1999 in Brazil.
Incumbents
= Federal government
=President: Fernando Henrique Cardoso
Vice President: Marco Maciel
= Governors
=Acre:
Orleir Messias Cameli (until 1 January)
Jorge Viana (from 1 January)
Alagoas:
Manoel Gomes de Barros (Mano) (until 1 January)
Ronaldo Lessa (from 1 January)
Amapa: João Capiberibe
Amazonas: Amazonino Mendes
Bahia:
Paulo Souto (until 1 January)
César Borges (from 1 January)
Ceará: Tasso Jereissati
Espírito Santo:
Vitor Buaiz (until 1 January)
José Ignácio Ferreira (from 1 January)
Goiás:
Helenês Cândido (until 1 January)
Marconi Perillo (from 1 January)
Maranhão: Roseana Sarney
Mato Grosso: Dante de Oliveira
Mato Grosso do Sul: José Orcírio Miranda dos Santos (from 1 January)
Minas Gerais:
Eduardo Brandão Azeredo (until 1 January)
Itamar Franco (from 1 January)
Pará: Almir Gabriel
Paraíba: José Maranhão
Paraná: Jaime Lerner
Pernambuco:
Miguel Arraes (until 1 January)
Jarbas Vasconcelos (from 1 January)
Piauí: Mão Santa
Rio de Janeiro:
Marcello Alencar (until 1 January)
Benedita da Silva (from 1 January)
Rio Grande do Norte: Garibaldi Alves Filho
Rio Grande do Sul:
Antônio Britto (until 1 January)
Olívio Dutra (from 1 January)
Rondônia: José de Abreu Bianco
Roraima: Neudo Ribeiro Campos
Santa Catarina:
Paulo Afonso Vieira (until 1 January)
Esperidião Amin (from 1 January)
São Paulo: Mário Covas
Sergipe: Albano Franco
Tocantins: José Wilson Siqueira Campos (from 1 January)
= Vice governors
=Acre:
Labib Murad (until 1 January)
Edison Simão Cadaxo (from 1 January)
Alagoas: Geraldo Costa Sampaio (from 1 January)
Amapá:
Antônio Hildegardo Gomes de Alencar (until 1 January)
Maria Dalva de Souza Figueiredo (from 1 January)
Amazonas: Samuel Assayag Hanan (from 1 January)
Bahia:
César Borges (until 1 January)
Otto Alencar (from 1 January)
Ceará:
Moroni Bing Torgan (until 1 January)
Benedito Clayton Veras Alcântara (from 1 January)
Espírito Santo
José Renato Casagrande (until 1 January)
Celso José Vasconcelos (from 1 January)
Goiás: Alcides Rodrigues Filho (from 1 January)
Maranhão: José Reinaldo Carneiro Tavares
Mato Grosso:
José Márcio Panoff de Lacerda (until 1 January)
José Rogério Sales (from 1 January)
Mato Grosso do Sul:
Vacant (until 1 January)
Moacir Kohl (from 1 January)
Minas Gerais:
Walfrido Silvino dos Mares Guia Neto (until 1 January)
Newton Cardoso (from 1 January)
Pará:
Hélio Mota Gueiros Júnior (until 1 January)
Hildegardo de Figueiredo Nunes (from 1 January)
Paraíba: Antônio Roberto de Sousa Paulino
Paraná: Emília de Sales Belinati
Pernambuco:
Jorge José Gomes (until 1 January)
José Mendonça Bezerra Filho (from 1 January)
Piauí:
Osmar Antônio de Araújo (until 1 January)
Osmar Ribeiro de Almeida Júnior (from 1 January)
Rio de Janeiro:
Luiz Paulo Correa da Rocha (until 1 January)
Benedita da Silva (from 1 January)
Rio Grande do Norte: Fernando Freire
Rio Grande do Sul:
Vicente Joaquim Bogo (until 1 January)
Miguel Soldatelli Rossetto (from 1 January)
Rondônia:
Aparício Carvalho de Moraes (until 1 January)
Miguel de Souza (from 1 January)
Roraima:
Airton Antonio Soligo (until 1 January)
Francisco Flamarion Portela (from 1 January)
Santa Catarina:
José Augusto Hülse (until 1 January)
Paulo Roberto Bauer (from 1 January)
São Paulo: Geraldo Alckmin
Sergipe:
José Carlos Machado (until 1 January)
Benedito de Figueiredo (from 1 January)
Tocantins:
Raimundo Nonato Pires dos Santos (until 1 January)
João Lisboa da Cruz (from 1 January)
Events
= January
=January 1: Fernando Henrique Cardoso begins his second term as president of Brazil.
January 24: Central Station by Walter Salles, wins the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
= February
=February 1: Antônio Carlos Magalhães (PFL/BA) and Michel Temer (PMDB/SP) are re-elected, respectively, as presidents of the Federal Senate and the Chamber of Deputies.
= March
=March 11: A blackout affects the Federal District, as well as ten states in the South, Southeast, and Central-West regions.
March 21: After 94 days, the kidnapping of Wellington Camargo (brother of the country duo Zezé di Camargo & Luciano) ends. Camargo was found in a bush on the side of a road in Guapó and the kidnappers were arrested.
March 22: The newspaper Agora São Paulo is launched to replace Folha da Tarde.
= May
=May 10th: The television network Rede Manchete ceases broadcasting, due to a growing decrease in audience, excessive interest on the station's debt and that of the Bloch Group; management failures and salary arrears since the previous year. The network later becomes RedeTV!.
= June
=June 6: In São José dos Campos, 345 prisoners escape from Putim prison through the front gate.
= July
=July 18: Brazil defeats Uruguay 3-0, earning their sixth Copa América championship.
July 26 - Truckers go on a national strike for four days in a row. Drivers claimed toll tariff reduction, tax exemption and retirement regulation.
= September
=September 29: Francisco de Assis Pereira, "The Park Maniac", is sentenced to 121 years in prison for the death of ten women in the State Park, in São Paulo.
= November
=November 3: Mateus da Costa Meira, a 24-year old medical student, kills 3 people in a theater with a submachine gun.
= December
=December 11: Unsuccessful launch of VLS-1 V02 occurs.
Births
= January
=14 January: Emerson Royal, footballer
= March
=27 May: Matheus Cunha, footballer
= August
=13 August: Giulia Be, singer
15 August: Paola Reis, BMX rider
= October
=8 October: Camila Rossi, rhythmic gymnast
= December
=28 December: Ary Borges, footballer
Deaths
= March
=7 March: Antônio Houaiss, writer and lexicographer (born 1915)
12 March: Bidu Sayão, opera singer (born 1902)
24 March: Ladjane Bandeira, journalist and artist (born 1927)
= April
=1 April: Marcos Rey, writer (born 1925)
= May
=18 May: Dias Gomes, dramatist (born 1922)
22 May: Milton Banana, bossa nova and jazz drummer (born 1935)
29 May: João Carlos de Oliveira, athlete (born 1954)
= June
=12 June: Carlos Kroeber, actor (born 1934)
19 June: Heloísa Helena, actress (born 1917)
= July
=16 July: Franco Montoro, politician (born 1916)
= August
=27 August: Hélder Câmara, Catholic archbishop (born 1909)
= October
=8 October:
Manfredo Fest, bossa nova and jazz pianist (born 1936)
Zezé Macedo, comedian and actress (born 1916)
30 October: Nise da Silveira, psychiatrist and student of Carl Jung (born 1905)
= November
=19 November: Plínio Marcos, writer and actor (born 1935)
22 November: Flávio Costa, football player and coach (born 1906)
= December
=3 December: Edmond Safra, Lebanese-born banker (born 1932)
8 December: Toninho, footballer (born 1948)
24 December: João Figueiredo, 30th President of Brazil (born 1918)
29 December: José Cláudio dos Reis, sports administrator (born 1939)
See also
1999 in Brazilian football
1999 in Brazilian television
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- 1999
- B. J. Habibie
- LATAM Brazil
- Ras Kaukasia
- Tim nasional bola voli putra Brasil
- Pelé
- Juninho Pernambucano
- Adriana Lima
- Kekaisaran Brasil
- Klaas-Jan Huntelaar
- 1999 in Brazil
- Brazil
- 1999 Brazilian Grand Prix
- 1999 Southern Brazil blackout
- Miss Brazil 1999
- Slavery in Brazil
- 1999
- 1999 in Brazilian television
- Brazil national football team
- Agriculture in Brazil