The Guardian (USA)

Heavily armed police launch bid to reclaim control of Rio de Janeiro favela

- Tom Phillips in Rio de Janeiro

Hundreds of heavily armed police have stormed one of Rio’s largest favelas at the start of what authoritie­s claimed was a “transforma­tional” attempt to wrest back control from the drug gangs and paramilita­ry mafias which dominate huge swaths of the Brazilian city.

The operation began at daybreak on Wednesday as security forces in camouflage gear and armoured personnel carriers swept into Jacarezinh­o, a bustling redbrick community that has been a stronghold of the Red Command drug faction since the 1980s.

One burly special forces soldier sported a Latin adage on a tactical vest stuffed with high-caliber ammunition.

“Si vis pacem, para bellum,” it said. “If you want peace, prepare for war.”

Hours later police said 30 arrests were made as troops targeted Muzema, a much smaller favela controlled by the “milícia” mafia groups that many now consider a far greater threat than Rio’s drug factions.

“Today’s operations are merely the start of changes that go far beyond public security,” tweeted Rio’s conservati­ve governor, Cláudio Castro, an ally of the Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro, who once publicly called for the milícias to be legalized.

Civil police chief Allan Turnowski said a permanent police occupation would follow Wednesday’s raid on Jacarezinh­o, which last year was the scene of the worst police massacre in Rio history. “This will work out. Good always defeats evil,” Turnowski wrote on Instagram.

Other communitie­s will reportedly be occupied in the coming days.

Critics and specialist­s doubt the new wave of occupation­s will do anything to resolve the decades-long drug conflict that continues to claim hundreds of mostly young, black lives each year.A high-profile “pacificati­on” project, launched before Brazil’s 2014 World Cup and Rio’s 2016 Olympics, was initially hailed as a success but failed to permanentl­y evict trafficker­s from the favelas, while milícias have massively expanded their footprint over the last decade and now control more than 50% of the city.

Pablo Nunes, a public security expert from Rio’s Centre for Studies on Public Security and Citizenshi­p, voiced skepticism over the claim from Rio’s governor that this week’s operations – which caught specialist­s by surprise – represente­d the start of “a major process of transforma­tion” in the favelas.

“The favelas and outskirts of Rio have never been transforme­d by the barrel of a gun,” said Nunes, who suspected the initiative was simply a political ploy to help a politicall­y weak governor secure a second term in office later this year.

“This is a very well-known script,” Nunes said of the political use of public security policy in Rio, with little if any thought given to the people and communitie­s affected or the long-term impact on crime.

Ivan Blaz, the spokespers­on for Rio’s military police, pushed back against such doubts, claiming authoritie­s were determined to combat drug trafficker­s and the “rule of terror” imposed by milícias, who he admitted enjoyed the support of serving or former members of the security forces.

“I understand [some people] feel they have seen this film before … but it’s my duty to not accept this,” Blaz said as a helicopter swooped over streets long controlled by rifle-toting gang members. “Optimism is part of my uniform.”

Leandro Souza, a community leader in Jacarezinh­o, said he hoped the military occupation would be accompanie­d by job-creation and training schemes and social projects that could lift a profoundly deprived community flanked by abandoned factories.

“If they manage this … it will be a huge step forwards like never seen before,” he said.

“I hope this is not simply another botched attempt at ‘pacificati­on’ that leads to bloodshed and claims the lives of residents, police officers and even those involved in drug traffickin­g.”

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? Special operations members of the Brazilian civil police check the identity of two men during an occupation of Jacarezinh­o favela, one of Rio’s largest. Photograph: Carl de Souza/
AFP/Getty Images Special operations members of the Brazilian civil police check the identity of two men during an occupation of Jacarezinh­o favela, one of Rio’s largest. Photograph: Carl de Souza/
 ?? Getty Images ?? A special operations member of the Brazilian civil police stands guard during the occupation of Jacarezinh­o favela in Rio de Janeiro. Photograph: Carl de Souza/AFP/
Getty Images A special operations member of the Brazilian civil police stands guard during the occupation of Jacarezinh­o favela in Rio de Janeiro. Photograph: Carl de Souza/AFP/

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