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Brazil asks hotel chains to explain World Cup prices
Brazil's justice ministry is asking the nation's main hotel chains to explain the high prices for rooms during the 2014 World Cup
Published in Ahram Online on 09 - 11 - 2013

The request comes after several complaints from consumer advocates and a study by the country's tourism board that showed exorbitant prices will be charged during the monthlong tournament.
Among the companies notified by the ministry Thursday were Accor, Choice, Louvre, Blue Tree, Nacional Inn, Wyndham, IHG and Bourbon. The Brazilian Association of the Hotel Industry also was notified.
The ministry said Friday the companies have 48 hours to respond to the request.
''Tourists are consumers which require special protection because they are outside of their city or country,'' Amaury Oliva, director of the ministry's consumer rights secretariat, said in a statement. ''We are working to make sure that they are well received and that the services we provide have quality and fair price.''
The ministry said it wants the hotel chains to provide the average rates charged in the past during other high-demand events in the 12 World Cup host cities, so they can be compared to the prices for the tournament. Although price increases are expected during special events such as the World Cup, officials suspect the chains might be overcharging more than usual this time.
Calls to the Brazilian Association of the Hotel Industry were not immediately answered Friday.
The tourism board, or Embratur, this year showed that rates will rise up to 500 percent during the World Cup in some hotels offered by the FIFA-appointed agency MATCH Services, prompting several consumer rights groups to demand government action.
Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff last month created a committee to monitor abusive price hikes of hotel rates and plane tickets during soccer's showcase event.
The government also said it will investigate whether MATCH, FIFA's official accommodation agency, was involved in ''cartel'' practices that may lead to price hikes during the World Cup, a claim FIFA and MATCH have repeatedly denied.
Brazil Sports Minister Aldo Rebelo, the government official in charge of preparations for the World Cup and the 2016 Rio Olympics, earlier this year pledged ''zero tolerance'' for hotels charging abusive room rates. He said significant hikes would hurt Brazil's image abroad and threaten to keep tourists away.
Although Brazil has said it will not try to control market prices, Rebelo warned that hotels that raised prices excessively would feel the ''heavy hand'' of the law, adding that consequences included possible hotel closures.
Brazil is expecting 600,000 foreigners and about 3 million local visitors traveling through the 12 host cities and the rest of the country next June, when it will host the World Cup for the first time since 1950.
(For more sports news and updates, follow Ahram Online Sports on Twitter at@AO_Sportsand on Facebook atAhramOnlineSports.)
http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/85970.aspx


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