San Francisco Chronicle

Thousands of troops sent to Rio amid rising violence

- By Liliana Michelena Liliana Michelena is an Associated Press writer.

RIO DE JANEIRO — Thousands of soldiers have begun patrolling Rio de Janeiro amid a spike in violence in Brazil’s second-largest city.

The deployment of 8,500 soldiers, plus hundreds of police and highway patrol officers, on Friday is aimed at fighting organized crime gangs, which control many of the city’s hundreds of slums.

Defense Minister Raul Jungmann said patrols would soon start participat­ing in operations against drug trafficker­s. That is a break from previous duties that were limited to patrolling, manning checkpoint­s and recovering caches of weapons seized during police raids. The operation is scheduled to run until the end of 2018.

Some troops began deploying in the afternoon, with trucks full of soldiers seen rolling over bridges and expressway­s.

While the main efforts were concentrat­ed in the city’s north, where violence is most pervasive, armored vehicles were also patrolling the quiet surroundin­gs of the Santos Dumont airport. As the sun set, a dozen soldiers with rifles in hand stood silhouette­d against Guanabara Bay.

“I’m not really sure what they are doing here, since the crime they have to fight is in the other side of the city,” said Almir Soares, a passerby. He called the deployment a stunt, but then conceded that the military operation could deter violence where it is actually needed.

Three people on average were killed each day by stray bullets in the first six months of the year in Rio de Janeiro. That mounting number, plus criminal assaults and increasing shootouts between drug trafficker­s and police, have led authoritie­s in recent weeks to acknowledg­e that much of the city is out of their control.

Last year, 85,000 troops were used to bolster security around the venues of the 2016 Summer Olympics held in Rio.

Public security experts say Brazil’s worst recession in decades is exacerbati­ng the situation.

 ?? Mauro Pimentel / AFP / Getty Images ?? Brazilian Army soldiers stand guard at Ipanema beach after the government’s decision to deploy troops to Rio de Janeiro to quell violence.
Mauro Pimentel / AFP / Getty Images Brazilian Army soldiers stand guard at Ipanema beach after the government’s decision to deploy troops to Rio de Janeiro to quell violence.

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