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- <text id=90TT0591>
- <title>
- Mar. 05, 1990: So You Think Your City's Got Crime?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 05, 1990 Gossip
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TRAVEL, Page 54
- So You Think Your City's Got Crime?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Rio de Janeiro offers fun in the sun, but a rising tide of
- lawlessness has brought fear to the festive atmosphere
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by John Maier/Rio de Janeiro
- </p>
- <p> If honor is to be found among thieves, "Kavera" is a young
- man of some principle. "We only attack men," says the mugger,
- 22. "Never Brazilians, never old people and women." It is after
- midnight in Rio de Janeiro, and his gang of street thieves is
- eyeing potential targets. "Women yell too much and become
- hysterical," Kavera explains, "and old people can suffer heart
- attacks, and we don't want to kill anybody." He is willing to
- make exceptions, though. The last man he killed was a beggar
- who was trying to rape a three-year-old homeless girl. "Luiz
- poured gasoline on him," says Kavera, pointing to a 16-year-old
- friend, "and I lit the match."
- </p>
- <p> These are busy times for Rio's thieves, at whose hands the
- lusty Brazilian city is suffering a public relations disaster.
- As the tourism season reaches its peak with the pre-Lenten
- Mardi Gras festival, the number of crimes committed against
- foreigners has risen so high that officials have predicted the
- most lawless Carnival in 25 years. Many tour operators are
- dropping Rio from their itineraries, and group sales from the
- U.S. could be down as much as 60% compared with 1988. Hotels
- that used to be 90% occupied at Carnival time are now only half
- full.
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to sell fun in the sun with statistics this grim:
- homicides in Rio jumped from 2,200 in 1987 to more than 2,800
- last year; an average of 100 cars were stolen every day; in
- just 24 hours ten people were shot through the head. Armed
- robbers even began holding up funeral services and processions
- in Rio's cemeteries, and last Christmas several churches
- scheduled their midnight Masses several hours early to reduce
- the risk of robberies. The city's largest electronics company
- temporarily stopped delivering goods because its trucks had
- been robbed so often.
- </p>
- <p> A single gang like Kavera's claims to hit as many as 30
- tourists a day during the peak season, when the sidewalks and
- beaches are plump with prey. Kavera happily recalls the cameras
- lying on towels, the bags left unattended. "Tourists can be so
- stupid," he muses. In January, 26 guests, including Americans,
- Danes, Austrians and Spaniards, went on a hunger strike at a
- Copacabana hotel to protest the management's refusal to
- reimburse them for valuables stolen from 50 of the hotel's 94
- safes. "There is no question that crime in Rio, especially
- violent crime, is increasing," says a U.S. diplomat who has
- been investigating the issue for the past two years, "and we
- know that a lot of incidents are not being reported."
- </p>
- <p> The reasons for the lawlessness are many, but the root cause
- is appalling poverty, rubbing raw against conspicuous wealth.
- The city is broken in half by a mountain range. The Zona Norte
- is dense, poor and desperately violent. The Zona Sul is laced
- with fancy apartments, fringed with world-class beaches, home
- to the rich and the tourists. In between, atop the granite peak
- of Corcovado, stands the symbol of Rio, a towering statue of
- Christ, his arms outstretched like a beleaguered mediator
- trying to keep two street fighters apart.
- </p>
- <p> The north, called the Baixada Flumi nense, is one of the
- most violent stretches of urban blight in the world. Its
- streets are besieged, its laws ignored, its people embattled
- and its children exploited. An annual inflation rate of 1,765%
- aggravates the huge gap between rich and poor. "Children learn
- to steal because they are hungry," says human rights lawyer
- Fernando Rodrigues. "If the problems of the distribution of
- wealth and the elimination of hunger are not solved, there is
- no way one can expect to reduce the violence in the streets."
- </p>
- <p> At least six people are murdered in the north of Rio every
- day. If the killer is not a known criminal, he could be a
- policeman; local shopkeepers hire moonlighting cops to hunt
- down robbers or deadbeat customers. "Merchants will make up a
- list of people to be killed and give it to the death squads,"
- says Rodrigues. "The official statistics don't include all the
- killings because people are afraid to report them, since they
- know that the police are part of the death squads." Many are
- afraid to go out at night.
- </p>
- <p> Though most tourists will never see the Baixada, they will
- feel its effect--for the fear of crime colors the character
- of the entire city. Women avoid wearing necklaces and earrings.
- Drivers run red lights at night, lest they be held up at
- gunpoint while stopped. Some cars are equipped with a hidden
- button that cuts off the gas line, so that a thief can travel
- only a few blocks before the engine stalls. In the absence of
- reliable police patrols, neighborhoods band together to hire
- private armed guards who demand identification from visitors.
- "There is more fear now than ever before," say sociology
- professor Luis Garcia de Sousa at the Pontifical Catholic
- University. "People live with this fear daily, so it has become
- part of their lives, their culture, like the climate here."
- </p>
- <p> Police Chief Helio Saboya reckons that if his 12,000-member
- force were twice its size, he might be able to make a dent in
- the crime. But in a country grappling with a foreign debt of
- $112.4 billion, the budgets for local services are going
- nowhere but down. The policemen themselves, who know they are
- undervalued, lacking respect and easily corrupted, earn on
- average about $100 a month. "When you have a family and you're
- risking your life on the job, that's not much at all," says a
- young officer. His fellow patrolmen all have other jobs--as
- mechanics or security guards or butchers. One source of extra
- income is shaking down the thieves: for a share of the
- plunder, the police will agree to look the other way.
- </p>
- <p> Not only is there temptation to break the law; there is no
- incentive to enforce it. Policemen know killers may do little
- prison time. "When you arrest a person, they know who stuck
- them in jail," says a 29-year-old officer in Ipanema, "and when
- they get out, they'll come to get you. I have a wife and
- daughter, and I'm not going to let that happen to me or them."
- </p>
- <p> Tourism officials like to point out that as bad as the crime
- wave is, it should not trouble foreign visitors if they avoid
- the worst neighborhoods. "The biggest problem with these
- reports is the false impression they leave," says Trajano
- Ribeiro, president of Rio's tourist agency. "When a report
- comes out saying 50 people were killed in a weekend, the image
- is that 50 people were gunned down on the beach."
- </p>
- <p> Without a major public relations campaign to reverse the
- impression that Rio is the Wild West, the steady stream of
- foreign visitors is not likely to resume--even though,
- according to Ribeiro, only about 1 in 100 tourists will be the
- victim of a crime. Last year, after 528 people were murdered
- in April alone, President Jose Sarney sought to compare Rio's
- plight favorably with another land's ten-year civil war. "It's
- not possible that they are killing more people in Rio than in
- the unfortunate, cruel and unjust civil war in Lebanon," said
- Sarney. Perhaps. But no one ever claimed Beirut was a Carnival.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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