World

Brazil police, military raid Rio slums ahead of World Cup

More than 1,400 police officers and Brazilian Marines rolled into a massive complex of slums near Rio de Janeiro's international airport before dawn Sunday in the latest security push ahead of this year's World Cup.

Complex around Rio de Janeiro's international airport targeted as part of 'pacification' effort

The Mare complex of slums, home to about 130,000 people and located near the international airport, is the latest area targeted for the Brazilian government's 'pacification' program, which sees officers move in, push out drug gangs and set up permanent police posts. (Silvia Izquierdo/The Associated Press)

More than 1,400 police officers and Brazilian marines rolled into a massive complex of slums near Rio de Janeiro's international airport before dawn Sunday in the latest security push ahead of this year's World Cup.

Not a shot was fired as the Mare complex of 15 slums became the latest impoverished area to see security forces move in to take control and try to push out heavily armed drug gangs that have ruled Rio's shantytowns for decades.

In the coming days, army soldiers will begin patrolling the virtually treeless, flat area of about 5 square kilometres in northern Rio that hugs the main road to the airport and is home to about 130,000 people.

We've needed to clean up this neighbourhood for so long, but we've always been ignored. For too many years these gangs have been ruling this place.- Hilda Guimares, resident of Mare slum in Rio

Security forces will eventually set up permanent posts in Mare as part of the "pacification" program that began in 2008 and is meant to secure Rio ahead of the World Cup and also the 2016 Summer Olympics. Police have installed 37 such posts in recent years in an area covering 1.5 million people.

Sunday's operation comes at a critical time for the security effort. In recent months, gangs have brazenly attacked police outposts in other shantytowns on orders from imprisoned gang leaders who want to stymie the spread of "pacified" slums.

With each area police occupy, gangs lose valuable territory for the manufacture and sale of drugs.

Hilda Guimares, an elderly woman who slowly shuffled down a street on her way to church in Mare as officers from Rio's elite BOPE police unit quickly moved past, said she welcomed the presence of the state.

"This had to happen and it's about time," said Guimares, a longtime resident of the area.

"We've needed to clean up this neighbourhood for so long, but we've always been ignored. For too many years these gangs have been ruling this place."

Other residents, most of whom were too afraid of both the police and the gangs to give their names, had mixed feelings.

'Pacifying' Rio's favelas

Over the arc of the five-year-old "pacification" program, shootouts in the affected slums are unquestionably down. But many residents complain of heavy-handed police tactics.

The Brazilian government began a 'pacification' program in 2008 aimed at eliminating drug violence in Rio's sprawling slums before the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Summer Olympics. (Felipe Dana/The Associated Press)
More than 20 police who patrolled in Rio's largest slum, Rocinha, are facing charges for the torture, disappearance and presumed death of a slum resident there, whom they were questioning in an effort to find caches of drugs and guns in the community.

Additionally, residents say that after police set up permanent posts in slums, the state is not following up with strong social programs that would improve their lives.

"I didn't believe the police would actually come until I saw them enter before dawn," said Sabrina, a 15-year-old girl working at a snack stand who asked that her last name not be used, saying she was afraid of retribution by gang members. "Those of us who live here are stuck between the gangs and the police; we don't know who is really going to control this place."