Hundreds
of police storm Brazilian slums
Brazilian
troops and police swept through Rio’s most infamous slums in a
pre-dawn raid, backed up by helicopters and tanks. The “pacification”
mission is intended to bring the crime-ridden favelas to heel before
the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics.
RT,
14
October, 2012
Over
2,000 troops participated in the crack operation in the northern
favelas of Jacarezinho and Manguinhos. They began moving through the
shanty towns at 5:00 am local time, searching houses and making
arrests.
The
slums are renowned for the trafficking of crack cocaine and weapons,
which police confiscated during the operation. Despite the favelas’
reputations, police said that the raid went without a hitch.
Around
800 officers entered into the favelas flanked by armored vehicles
while the rest patrolled the perimeter.
“The
situation is very calm, there have been no incidents,” Colonel
Federico Caldas, head of public relations for the military police, to
Globo News. “At the moment we are carrying out a meticulous search
for drugs and weapons.”
He
went onto say that the police will continue to maintain a presence in
the area and hope to construct a "pacification unit" in the
slums by the end of the year.
The
shanty town's inhabitants watched on as officers patrolled the
streets for the first time in decades.
“I
think that it’s great that peace has finally arrived in
Jacarezinho,” said 35-year-old Paulo Cesar, on his way to church.
Around
75,000 people inhabit Jacarezinho and Manguinhos, slums recognized as
Rio's most dangerous. Drug trafficking is rife in the favelas, where
the trading of crack cocaine is an everyday activity.
The
Sunday operation included members of a municipal organization that
fights crack addiction; its workers took around 70 people to
rehabilitation centers.
Paving
the way for ‘pacification’
Rio’s
elite police force killed five suspected drug cartel bosses in a
nearby neighborhood on Saturday and mounted a search for another ten.
According to police figures, criminal activity in the favelas has
fallen by 60 per cent because of the increased police activity.
The
“pacification” project was launched in 2008 with a view to
improving city security ahead of the 2016 Olympics. Thus far the
authorities have installed 29 "police pacification units"
and aim to have 40 in place by 2014.
Although
the pacification operation has largely been praised for establishing
law and order in Rio's crime-ridden areas, which had previously been
controlled by armed drug cartels, in some areas there have been
complaints of police corruption and abuses.


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