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- <text id=93TT0176>
- <title>
- Aug. 09, 1993: Rio's Dead End Kids
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 09, 1993 Lost Secrets Of The Maya
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BRAZIL, Page 36
- Rio's Dead End Kids
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Murder by death squads has made life more dangerous than ever
- for Brazil's youngest, poorest and homeless
- </p>
- <p>By MARGUERITE MICHAELS--With reporting by Ian McCluskey/Rio de Janeiro
- </p>
- <p> Freedom--of sorts. Freedom from beatings by a drunken father.
- Freedom from fighting with seven siblings for a crust of bread.
- Freedom to hope. Cristiano, now 16, fled the abuse and violence
- of his home at 6. Surely the streets of glamorous, wealthy Rio
- de Janeiro offered a better life than the wretched slum west
- of the city where he was born.
- </p>
- <p> In the streets Cristiano found only a freedom full of cruelty.
- During the day he survived by shining shoes and stealing watches
- or purses. At night on the sidewalks of Cinelandia, the main
- square in the center of Rio, he huddled close to a band of young
- friends for protection. Sometimes a rival pack of street kids
- attacked them, but more often the police came, swinging batons.
- Cristiano slept on a piece of cardboard near the majestic Municipal
- Theater and across the street from the National Fine Arts Museum.
- He was free to steal from others' lives, not free to live his
- own.
- </p>
- <p> Slight, dark-skinned Cristiano is one of the lucky ones. After
- seven years on the streets, he moved to a shelter run by the
- Sao Martinho Aid Society. His room is small but clean. There
- is a television in the hall and food downstairs in the kitchen.
- The shelter kids work odd jobs during the day and go to school
- at night.
- </p>
- <p> The unlucky ones stay on the streets. They live hand to mouth,
- wrapped in tattered gray blankets or plastic bags at night,
- washing windshields, selling gum, running drugs, begging, stealing
- in order to eat. Or they die, victims not just of poverty but
- of murder as well.
- </p>
- <p> A familiar sight in Brazil's cities for decades, the meninos
- de rua (street kids) used to be considered no more than pests.
- But because they are increasingly blamed for the rising crime
- rate in Brazil's cities, they have now become prey: an average
- of four a day are killed. The most shocking attack came around
- midnight two weeks ago in Rio. Five men opened fire on a group
- of 50 sleeping children, killing three, ages 11, 14 and 17,
- on the spot. Two more died in the hospital from gunshot wounds
- to the head. Two other boys were dragged into a car and shot,
- their bodies dumped a mile away. An eighth boy died five days
- later, never waking from a coma.
- </p>
- <p> Three military policemen were arrested for the shootings as
- Brazilians sought to address, once again, the escalating cycle
- of vigilantism. President Itamar Franco said he felt the murders
- "like a punch in the face," and protesters marched through Rio
- carrying banners that read STREET KIDS ARE OUR KIDS.
- </p>
- <p> Yet many Brazilians had no sympathy for the victims. "Everyone
- is making them out to be heroes," says taxi driver Joao Mendes,
- "but they were not sweet flowers." Citizens calling in to local
- talk shows applauded the massacre. Says Alexandre Coelho Reis,
- 23, who works in Rio: "Many of these 13-year-old kids have killed.
- They deserve to die."
- </p>
- <p> Tens of thousands of homeless children haunt the alleys and
- boulevards of Brazil's major cities. "The typical menino de
- rua," says Roberto Jose dos Santos, who runs the Sao Martinho
- shelter, "is black or mulatto with lots of brothers and sisters.
- There is an alcoholic mother or stepfather. He, and increasingly
- she, has grown up in a climate of violence in a suburban slum.
- No one is concerned about keeping him in school. There is no
- love or affection at home, and so he leaves."
- </p>
- <p> Many kids work in gangs, sweeping through apartment buildings
- and stores, stealing whatever they can lay their hands on. Sometimes
- they kill. Last year in Sao Paulo minors committed a rash of
- murders: a businessman shot in his car at a stoplight by a 17-year-old
- thief, a doctor shot by a boy of 12 robbing his house.
- </p>
- <p> But mostly it is the kids who die. Some kill each other in quarrels
- over booty. Others die in clashes between rival drug gangs that
- more and more frequently employ the meninos de rua as drug runners
- or soldiers guarding turf. Many are stamped out by death squads
- hired by terrorized shop owners. Off-duty cops and ex-cops carry
- out many of the killings. According to a Brazilian congressional
- report, 15 extermination squads including policemen and private
- security guards operate in northern Rio alone.
- </p>
- <p> If the three policemen arrested last week are ever convicted
- of murder, they could get multiple life sentences. But Brazil's
- record of imposing strict punishment on rogue cops is not good.
- International human-rights groups have denounced the military-police
- force as one of the world's most brutal. In greater Sao Paulo
- (pop. 16 million) last year, police killed 1,470 people. In
- nearly every case the military tribunals that tried them absolved
- them of wrongdoing. The police of Rio de Janeiro are especially
- corrupt. They provide cover for powerful drug lords, organize
- car-theft rings, and are often involved in kidnap pings and
- robberies. Last year's congressional report called for the indictment
- of more than 100 members of death squads and changes in the
- prosecution laws. But so far, none of the recommendations have
- been carried out.
- </p>
- <p> It will be no easier to get the kids off the streets. Cristiano's
- savior, the Sao Martinho Aid Society, is one of hundreds of
- private groups in Rio attempting to provide shelter, jobs and
- education. But resources are scarce. Last year the government
- promised $1 billion to finance internships and literacy programs;
- very little of that money has reached its destination. Says
- Ana Vasconcelos, who runs a halfway house in the eastern city
- of Recife: "There is no respect for these programs because they
- don't bring votes for anyone."
- </p>
- <p> Brazilians are rightly skeptical of any solutions proffered
- by the government. In 40 years Brazil has gone from a predominantly
- rural country to an overwhelmingly urban one. Almost every major
- city is surrounded by slums mired in poverty, despair and violence.
- Out of a population of 152 million, there are 32 million children
- living in families earning less than $30 per person a month,
- a particularly bitter statistic in the richest economy in Latin
- America. The top 20% of Brazil's population earns 26 times as
- much as the bottom 20%; in the U.S. the disparity is 9 to 1.
- "It is no use killing street kids," says 17-year-old Rosimere
- at the Sao Martinho shelter. "There will always be more of them."
- </p>
- <p> Many of Cristiano's friends have already died. A growing number
- of Brazilians fear that many more will be lost unless the country
- sees the meninos de rua not just as the victims of brutal, corrupt
- police but as the responsibility of a troubled society.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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