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Vanda Felbab-Brown

Vanda Felbab-Brown

Posted: March 17, 2011 06:17 PM

President Obama's Visit to a Favela in Rio: Below the Surface Calm


A part of President Obama's visit to Brazil is to be an outing to a favela, a slum neighborhood, in Rio de Janeiro. Rio's government wants to show off the progress of its so-called Pacification Plan (UPP) designed to address the criminality, underdevelopment, and lack of state presence of these poor neighborhoods.

Historically deprived and neglected in their economic development, social integration, and provision of public safety, Rio's favelas are ghettos of thousands to tens of thousands of people. When I visited one notorious favela, the Alemão complex, last year, I had to pass through a checkpoint manned by drug gang members with AK-47s and be accompanied by a "fixer" trusted by the gang. Inside, ramshackle houses with pirated electricity and without water or sewage systems precariously lined steep hills of narrow unpaved alleys. Many of the houses were riddled with bullet holes from periodic and bloody urban warfare between Rio's police and the gangs. In the main square, a table, guarded by about ten young men with machine guns, was spread out with packets of cocaine for purchase.

The purpose of UPP is to retake the favelas from gangs like the Comando Vermelho. The goals are to beef up security in Rio before the 2014 Soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics, assure Cariocas (how the residents of Rio's nonfavela neighborhoods are known) that their fear of street and organized crime often blamed on the favelas is being addressed, and hopefully to improve the living conditions for the favela residents. First, heavily-armed SWAT forces known as BOPE are sent to retake a favela. After fighting subsides, the heavy police forces are replaced by community police, and socio-economic provisions are brought in to secure the allegiance of the population to the state and to wean the community from the drug gangs. The takeover of Alemão in December of last year, after previous failed attempts, was widely applauded as a major success.

Modeled after similar programs, such as Virada Sociale in Sao Paolo and GPAE in Rio in the 1990s, the strategy has several points of vulnerability. First, the heavy forces often fail to capture the gang leaders and many gang members who either escape to another favela or the outskirts of Rio or blend in among the raided favela's population. Favela residents at best do not trust the police; at worst deeply resent its presence, seeing it as an occupation force. They thus lack motivation to provide intelligence to the state.

The persistence of the gang leadership and structure becomes especially a problem after the handoff to the community police, which is much more lightly armed. When the BOPE teams arrive, the drug gang often chooses not to fight, but then tries to retake the favela after the BOPE forces leave. Rumors have persisted for months, for example, that the drug gangs have been mobilizing hundreds of combatants to retake another prominent favela, Cidade de Deus. Although they haven't succeeded, their shadow presence continues to intimidate the favela community and scare it from cooperating with the state.

Second, the UPP operations are very resource-intensive, and Rio lacks enough community police to retake all the favelas and maintain a sufficient law-enforcement presence. Moreover, Rio's police forces are notoriously brutal, corrupt, and deeply penetrated by organized crime, including drug gangs and anti-gang militias. Rio is now focusing on undertaking comprehensive police reform, but it is a slow and painstaking process.

Third, building trust in the community takes a long time. Often the immediate consequence of the suppression of a drug gang is the rise of street crime and the collapse of dispute resolution mechanisms in the favela since the drug gangs often function as sole providers of order and rules. The community police often struggle to suppress street crime. Access to formal and effective justice is slow to arrive in the favelas.

Similarly, the socio-economic package is often meager and frequently comprises limited handouts, such a clinic here and a water tank there, rather than being comprehensive enough to turn the life of a community around and generate sustainable development. Rio is trying to beef up the program, such as by bringing mobile medical teams to the favelas on a regular basis. The toughest challenge is generating jobs in the legal economy for the young men who have been employed in the drug trade, which underpins much of the favelas' economic activity. Finding alternative jobs for them and other favela residents with limited education and mobility is difficult, especially since Cariocas are frequently reluctant to hire someone with a favela address even for menial jobs.

The UPP faces a tough road ahead: despite the tragic violence, the BOPE takeovers are often the easiest part. But after years of repressive policies alternated by neglect, UPP is the best chance that favela residents have had.

 
A part of President Obama's visit to Brazil is to be an outing to a favela, a slum neighborhood, in Rio de Janeiro. Rio's government wants to show off the progress of its so-called Pacification Plan (...
A part of President Obama's visit to Brazil is to be an outing to a favela, a slum neighborhood, in Rio de Janeiro. Rio's government wants to show off the progress of its so-called Pacification Plan (...
 
 
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12:33 PM on 03/18/2011
"The purpose of UPP is to retake the favelas from gangs like the Comando Vermelho. The goals are to beef up security in Rio before the 2014 Soccer World Cup and 2016 Olympics"

The UPPs started before they knew they would host the Olympics. Not everything in Brazil has to be about foreigners.

"Cariocas (how the residents of Rio's nonfavela neighborhoods are known)"

No. Carioca is how you call any and every body who's from the city of Rio, all neighborhoods included.
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Michael Ludin
Child advocate
11:08 AM on 03/18/2011
I agree with you, until you see it, one can't imagine. 200,000 sometimes living in squalid conditions on a hill, sometimes with satellite TV, Internet, it's own security force as you described -- when I spoke with some, it seemed more middle-class and where many in the tourist industry live [or stay] because they can't afford to otherwise live in or near Rio to get to work. Ballsy for Obama to go, and for the Olympics and World Cup too. Yet, the most beautiful and friendly people as anywhere in the world. It is a living quagmire.
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johnnygoodwud
08:49 AM on 03/18/2011
anyone watched 'wasteland' about the garbage pickers in brazil. amazing documentary.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
02:07 AM on 03/18/2011
Houston's Fifth Ward is apparently just like a favela, or even like South Africa's townships.
12:55 AM on 03/18/2011
Sometimes American solutions can help Brazil solve crime problems. But the issue you describe is more to do with politics than with crime and for that reason, Brazilian officials get tired quickly of yankee solutioneering.

To start with the US war on drugs in Columbia, where personal use of the cocaine that drives the war is legal, has pushed the drugs into the favelas and elsewhere big time. Also, there is more than one Red Brigade (Brigada Vermelho) in the favelas and they fight amongst themselves as much as with the law enforcement, which has its own Zeta-style renegade crew involved in drug biz.

The Obama visit to the favelas is part of a public diplomacy social media play to make him popular to Brazilian people. His experience will be about as tame as Bill Clinton eating at his favorite restaurant in Harlem. It has been announced that his children will be accompanying him to the favela and that they will be giving their own little speeches about education. They receive expensive private school education at the Sidwell Friends school that costs around $50,000 a year per child. Favela kids will be lucky to earn that much in their entire lives in the straight economy.

The favela political groups repress their own people in the zone as much as the PP or the BOPE or the DAIC. Brazil values about drug use, alcohol, and organized crime are grounded in a different culture than the US culture.
09:18 PM on 03/17/2011
American-f­avela public housing was created in the 1960's by LBJ's Great Society. These slums exist all over America. You cannot help these people with giveaways. You must give them pride and jobs. Socialism that Brazil now promotes will not work.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
02:07 AM on 03/18/2011
Can you define socialism?
08:41 AM on 03/18/2011
That is an odd thing to say because Brazil is doing well with trying to improve itself under their outgoing Prez Lula. His approach was a middle ground between socialism and private enterprise. It has made Brazil an economic powerhouse.

The slums in Brazil are not so different than the slums here. A real big problem. Part of that problem is the retreat of the wealthy into walled communities. We do the same here and cuts to public education here is an attempt to make the USA much more like the worst of Brazil and the worst of Latin America. No?

LBJ for gods sake is dead now for a long time. The commitment of the Democrats and Republicans to eradicate poverty in the USA has just floundered. We do neither a free enterprise approach here nor a socialist one. We just talk carp about jobs and education and poverty.

George W Bush had this great idea "no child left behind" it has done zero to help. The USA and Brazil have work to do.

Now Obama going down there is super duper odd exactly because we are not doing so great here. I wish he would be quiet, stay home and do his job.
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08:55 PM on 03/17/2011
If Mr. Obama would like to try some poverty-tourism closer to home, he could catch the Acela to Camden. OR, just visit some of DC's American-favela equivalent public housing.