The Day

Amid cuts, Rio police ask for handouts ahead of Olympics

- By JENNY BARCHFIELD

Rio de Janeiro — Just weeks ahead of the Olympic Games, police helicopter­s are grounded, patrol cars are parked and Rio de Janeiro’s security forces are so pressed for funds that some have to beg for donations of pens, cleaning supplies and even toilet paper, fueling worries about safety at the world’s premier sporting event.

Brazil is suffering the worst recession in decades and Rio’s acting governor has declared a state of financial disaster this month, largely to bolster spending on security as the world’s spotlight turns to the city.

“How are people going to feel protected in a city without security,” Gov. Francisco Dornelles told Rio’s O Globo newspaper. “We can have a great Olympics, but if some steps aren’t taken, it can be a big failure.”

Rio state has slashed budgets across the board, including that of the police. Helicopter­s have been grounded and more than half of the civil police’s fleet of cars has been idled in a bid to save on gas. Even officers’ salaries have been delayed.

Angry civil police officers staged a strike on Monday, with one contingent greeting visitors at Rio’s internatio­nal airport with a sign reading, in English, “Welcome to Hell. Police and firefighte­rs don’t get paid; Whoever comes to Rio de Janeiro will not be safe.”

The cuts have led to “a very big crisis in ... the self-esteem of the policemen,” said Ilona Szabo, executive director of the Instituto Igarape, a Rio-based security and social issues think tank.

Even so, she said the sheer number of officers on the streets should help avoid a major security breach at Olympic sites and in Rio’s beachfront neighborho­ods. Olympic officials insist Rio’s fiscal problems won’t affect security for the games.

Some 85,000 police and soldiers — roughly twice the security contingent at the London Olympics — are to be deployed during the Aug. 5-21 games, which are expected to draw an estimated 350,000500,000 foreigners to a city of 12 million people where armed muggings, stray bullets and turf wars between heavily armed drug gangs are routine.

Rio’s civil police, who oversee investigat­ions while the military police handle patrols, acknowledg­ed in a statement that “some stations” are receiving donated office supplies.

 ?? SILVIA IZQUIERDO/AP PHOTO ?? A police officer yells into a microphone during a protest demanding better labor conditions in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Monday.
SILVIA IZQUIERDO/AP PHOTO A police officer yells into a microphone during a protest demanding better labor conditions in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Monday.

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