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Crime in Brazil

Crime in Brazil involves an elevated incidence of violent and non-violent crimes.[1] Brazil's homicide rate was 27.4 per 100,000 inhabitants, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).[2][better source needed] Brazil has the highest number of intentional homicides in the world, with 57,358 in 2018. In recent years, the homicide rate in Brazil has begun to decline. The homicide rate was 20.64 per 100,000 in 2020 with 43,879 killings, similar to 2019, but down from 30.67 per 100,000 in 2017.[3]

Police cars of the Polícia do Estado de São Paulo in 2017
Detention in Brasília.

Brazil is a central hub for the Illegal drug trade.[4]

Homicides edit

In terms of absolute number of murders in a year, Brazil has the most murders of any country by total number (62,318) followed by India (29,000), the USA (25,000) and Mexico (24,576).

In 2018, Brazil had a murder rate of 24.7 per 100,000 people. In 2017, Brazil had a murder rate of 29.2 per 100,000 population.[5][6] There were a total of 56,101 murders in Brazil in 2017.[5] Another study has the 2017 murder rate at 32.4 per 100,000, with 64,357 homicides.[7] In 2016, Brazil had a record 61,819 murders or on average 168 murders per day, giving a yearly homicide rate of 29.9 per 100,000 population.[8]

In 2017, Brazil had a record number of murders, with homicides rising 4.20% with 63,880 homicides.[9][10]

In 2019, the anti-violence NGO Rio de Paz stated that only 8% of homicides in Brazil lead to criminal convictions.[11]

By Brazilian states edit

List of the Brazilian state capitals by homicide rate (homicides per 100,000):[12]

 
Murdered journalist in Rio de Janeiro

Murders increased during the late-2000s. Bucking this trend are the two largest cities. In 2008 Rio de Janeiro registered the lowest murder rate in 18 years, while São Paulo is now approaching the 10 murders per 100,000 mark, down from 35.7 in 1999. A notable example is the municipality of Diadema, where crime rates fell abruptly.

Total murders set new records in the three years from 2009 to 2011, surpassing the previous record set in 2003. 2003 still holds the record for murders per 100,000 in Brazil; that year alone the rate was 28.9.[13] Police records post significantly lower numbers than the health ministry.

Seven out of the twenty most violent cities in the world are in Brazil due to a rise in street violence.[14] In descending order as of April 2018, they are: Natal (fourth highest homicide rate worldwide), Fortaleza (seventh), Belém (tenth), Vitória da Conquista (eleventh), Maceió (fourteenth), Aracaju (eighteenth), and Feira de Santana (nineteenth).[15]

Robbery edit

Carjacking is common, particularly in major cities. Local citizens and visitors alike are often targeted by criminals, especially during public festivals such as the Carnaval.[16] Pickpocketing and bag snatching are common. Thieves operate in outdoor markets, in hotels and on public transport.

A trending crime known as "arrastões" (dragnets) occur when many perpetrators act together, simultaneously mug pedestrians, sunbathers, shopping mall patrons, and/or vehicle occupants stuck in traffic. Arrastões and random robberies may occur during big events (Carnaval), soccer games, or during peak beach hours.[17]

Kidnapping edit

Express kidnappings, where people are abducted while withdrawing funds from ATM, are common in major cities including Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Brasília, Curitiba, Porto Alegre, Salvador and Recife.[18]

Corruption edit

Corruption in Brazil is a pervasive social problem. Brazil scored 38 on the 2016 Corruption Perceptions Index, tying with India and Bosnia and Herzegovina, being ranked 76th among 175 countries.[19] Corruption was cited among many issues that provoked the 2013 protests in Brazil.[20] Embezzlement and corruption have influenced Brazilian elections for decades; however, the electorate continues to vote, whether out of preference or lack of choice, for candidates who have been accused, and in some instances convicted, on charges of corruption.[21]

Domestic violence edit

Between 10 and 15 women are murdered each day in Brazil.[22][23] A government sponsored study found that 41,532 women were murdered in Brazil between 1997 and 2007.[23] In 2012, 8% of all homicide victims were female. However, this is still far below the male victimization rate, in which men constitute 92% of homicide victims in Brazil as of 2012.[24]

Crime dynamics edit

 
An overhead view of Rocinha, the largest favela in Brazil; Rio de Janeiro, 2014.

Prevention and drug war edit

Brazilian drug war
 
Brazilian Army soldiers in a street in Vitória
Date2016–ongoing
Location
Brazil
Status Ongoing
Belligerents

  Brazil:


  Brazilian Armed Forces


Ministry of Justice

Primeiro Comando da Capital
Guardiões do Estado
Terceiro Comando Puro
Amigos dos Amigos


Comando Vermelho
Primeiro Grupo Catarinense
Paraguayan crime groups
Comando da Paz
Bala na Cara
Sindicato do Crime do Rio Grande do Norte, Okaido
Comando Revolucionário Brasileiro da Criminalidade


Família do Norte


Terceiro Comando
Brazilian police militias
Casualties and losses
More than 44,000 deaths[25][26][27][28][29][30]

A program to combat gangs and gang centered violence, the 'Pacifying Police Units' (UPP), was introduced in the traditionally violent favelas of Rio de Janeiro in 2008/2009. UPP personnel are well-educated and trained in both human rights and modern police techniques; their aim is to supplant the community presence of gangs as central community figures.[citation needed] In 2013, 34 UPP units operated in 226 different communities, with a reach of 1.5 million citizens.[31]

The UPP program symbolizes a new crime prevention paradigm that focuses on social inclusion and community development.[citation needed] However, in some areas the homicide rate was already dropping prior to the implementation of the program. Therefore, the drop in crime may be due to a general trend of decline in homicides as well.[5]

According to Instituto de Segurança Pública (ISP) data, between 2007 (the year before the first UPP) and 2013, the violent death rate in areas with UPPs dropped by 80% – a much more pronounced reduction than in the rest of the municipality,[clarification needed] which also experienced a drop in these indices over the period. The homicide rate caused by opposition to police intervention was the indicator of violence that showed the most significant reduction, of almost 90%, but also decreased other crimes against life and property.[32]

In 2014, however, the violent lethality indicators rose again not only in the UPP areas, but in the entire municipality. Rio had not seen so many violent deaths since 2009, the first year of the UPPs. Today the numbers are practically the same as in the pre-UPP period.

In the latest survey by the Cândido Mendes University Center for Security and Citizenship Studies (Cesec), carried out in 2014 with UPP officers, researchers had already found a complete abandonment of the "proximity" approach and the return to repressive policing.[32] According to them, the "lack of command, control and logistics" is the cause of all the problems in the Pacifying Police Units, including the death of police officers in the communities.[33]

As of 2015, Pacifying Police Units (UPPs) of Rio de Janeiro are no longer useful, according to specialists. After more than ten years of design, they are now beginning to undergo drastic changes, since police officers from different units also began to patrol the streets, in addition to the usual policing. The lack of formalization of the program and the establishment of evaluation indicators was also a problem, say the researchers. The UPPs have never had an internal and systematic evaluation.[32]

The movement was expanded "hastily", in an "unbridled" way. Between 2010 and 2013, the number of UPPs almost tripled, jumping from 13 to 36. The exaggerated expansion also ended up overloading the Military Police, an institution that, according to Rodrigues,[clarification needed] a former Military Police Colonel, already needed (and still needs) structural reforms.[32] "The solution is beyond the police. It seems a cliché, but the social part has been missing since the beginning of the project", evaluated the former Commander of the Military Police between 2007 and 2008.[33]

 
Change of Command Ceremony of 25 UPP Units, 2013

In the 7 years of the project, there were several allegations of corruption and abuse of force involving UPP soldiers. The most remembered among them is the torture and death of the bricklayer Amarildo de Souza.

The proposal, however, proved to be flawed due to the inexperience of these new military police officers with no apparent condition to work in former faction strongholds, as was the case in Rocinha and Complexo do Alemão. Burning containers, lack of restrooms and armor, accumulated garbage, broken air conditioning was just one of the proofs that the military police were not working under ideal conditions. And on at least eight bases the PMs would be working in an extreme situation.[32] Former ISP Director Ana Paula Miranda also believes that "during all this time, an idea was made that the problems in Rio de Janeiro were over", "That was the first mistake. Excessive advertising not taking into account the flaws throughout the project".[34]

Since the first UPP arrived, in the Santa Marta community, in Botafogo, in 2008, the reality of the residents has changed not only in relation to the actions of armed groups. Everything got more expensive: the electricity bill started to arrive and there was no way to practice these "thefts" in electricity. By 2015, the favela that had once a "model" UPP unit, saw the number of homicides spike, alongside the drug war.[34][35]

In the past, the State of Rio de Janeiro had already carried out a similar attempt at occupation, and for the same reasons, in Ana Paula's opinion, the project did not succeed and, it seems, the lesson was not learned. "The strategy is very similar. There was a lack of perception that these problems would all happen later".[34]

In April 2017, at Complexo do Alemão, a 19.6-foot-high (6.0 m) armored tower was installed, resistant to rifles and grenade explosions, to house UPP police from the Nova Brasília community.[32]

As of May 2021, a new project was released by the then Governor Cláudio Castro and documents obtained by the media in September showed the discussion of the project for at least 2 months. Called Cidade Integrada (Integrated City), the new program for the occupation of communities by the Government of Rio de Janeiro, in a model of public security and urban and social interventions. It is not yet clear, however, how the police will act in this new project.[36][37]

Jacarezinho, where there is strong influence from drug trafficking, and Muzema, controlled by the militia, are expected to be the first to receive the program, with its launch scheduled for late November or early December.[needs update]

 
Police officers in the favela of Rocinha

Gangs edit

Gang violence has been directed at police, security officials and related facilities. Gangs have also attacked official buildings and set alight public buses.[38] May 2006 São Paulo violence began on the night of 12 May 2006 in São Paulo, Brazil. It was the worst outbreak of violence recorded in Brazilian history and was directed against security forces and some civilian targets. By 14 May the attacks had spread to other Brazilian states including Paraná, Mato Grosso do Sul, Minas Gerais and Bahia. Another outbreak of violence took place in São Paulo in July 2006.

2016 saw a new string of deadly prison riots. The nature of these riots was a turf war between the Primeiro Comando da Capital and other gangs, with the PCC aggressively expanding its territory.[39][40] In 2019, a prison riot between two gangs, Comando Vermelho and Comando Classe A, left 57 dead after hours of fighting.[41]

Brazilian gang members have used children to commit crimes because their prison sentences are shorter. As of 2007, murder was the most common cause of death among youth in Brazil, with 40% of all murder victims aged between 15 and 25 years old.[42]

In regard to inter-gang conflict, gangs typically challenge or demand an aggressive reaction to defend their reputations. If someone does not respond in this manner, they are socially isolated. The gangs in Brazil are very territorial, and focused on their illegal business. Theft and robbery bring in small amounts of money compared to narcotic and weapons sales so it is less common for these gangs to get involved in petty crimes of theft or robbery.[43]

The gangs in Rio de Janeiro are interested in harmony because they do not want any contact with the police. They will help others in the community, with money and even protection, just to be sure that the police do not come around. Children and other members of the community see notably rich and powerful gang members and want to emulate this behavior. Gang members then become a substitute for family and are role models because they have respect and money.[43]

It is most common for these gangs to be under a military command structure.[43] Each Rio favela has one dono who controls the managers of a favela and the soldados in his territory. The latter protect the favela against other drug factions and the police. They are also responsible for taking over other favelas. The managers of a favela control the managers of the bocas (the places where drugs are sold in the favela). The managers of the bocas in turn control the drug dealers who sell the drugs in the area around a boca. There are children and women who wait at the entrances to a favela to signal to the others if the police or other gangs are about to enter.[43] It is normal to join at about 10 years old, and by 12 years old to carry weapons. These gangs are attractive to the children and youth because they offer protection, recognition, and career options that those who join could not achieve on their own. Favelas are now often controlled by juveniles and young adults.[43]

The concern here is of the strong ties that are between illegal business and politicians, police officers, the justice system, and the economy. Not all people are involved but all layers of society are affected because of corruption. Police are bribed to not disturb what these gangs are doing, and many of them are dealers themselves.[43] Also, young children carry guns and may be nervous, aware of peer pressure, or on drugs, and can become careless. Brutality and homicide rates have skyrocketed in countries with younger gang members like this.[43]

Drug trafficking edit

 
Cracolândia ("land of crack") in central São Paulo.

Drug trafficking makes up for an increasingly large portion of crime in Brazil. A total of 27% of all incarcerations in Brazil are the result of drug trafficking charges. Between 2007 and 2012 the number of drug related incarcerations has increased from 60.000 to 134.000; a 123 percent increase.[32]

The primary drug trafficking jobs for children and youth are:

  • endoladores: packages the drugs[43]
  • olheiro(a) and/or fogueteiro(a): lookouts to provide early warning of police or any enemy drug faction invasion[43]
  • Drug mule: carries drugs to others inside their body, these are unwilling members of a gang, and don't survive for very long.
  • vapor: drug sales persons[43]
  • gerente da boca: overseer of drug sales[43]
  • soldado(a): soldiers, armed and employed to maintain protection[43]
  • fiel: personal armed security guard for the "gerente geral"[43]
  • gerente geral or dono: owner/boss[43]
  • Aviões (literally translated to "little airplanes"). These are the children who deliver messages and drugs to customers. They are not described in the hierarchal organization, but they are very low/entry-level positions. In addition, those I. this position have the most arrests.[43]

Of 325 incarcerated youth, 44% of boys and 53% of girls reported some involvement with drug trafficking.[43] Selling and carrying drugs were the most common activities between both boys and girls. The most common drug was marijuana, followed by cocaine and crack.[43] From the study; 74% had used marijuana, 36% had snorted cocaine, and 21% had used crack.[43]

Youth held low positions in the hierarchy and engaged in relatively low volumes of activity for short periods of time, but 51% of youth involved with trafficking reported it to be very easy to obtain a gun,[43] while 58% involved in trafficking reported it to be very easy to obtain cocaine.[43]

On 6 May 2021, at least 25 people were killed in a shootout between police and a drug-dealing gang.

Penalties edit

Criminal penalties for youths, who make up a significant portion of street crime, is internment in educational centers with a maximum stay of 3 years.[44] Youths are not punished under the penal code, but under the Brazilian Statute of the Child and Adolescent.[44]

For adults, the consumption of drugs is nearly decriminalized, but activities in any way related to the sale of drugs are illegal.[45] The distinction between drug consumers and suppliers is poorly defined and thus controversial. This ambiguity gives judges a high degree of discretion in sentencing, and leads to accusations of discriminatory or unequal court rulings.[46] Drug consumers receive light penalties varying from mandatory self-education on the effects of drugs to community service. The minimum sentence for a drug supplying offense is 5 to 15 years in prison.[47] Critics of the consumer/supplier distinction between offenses argue for a more complex categorization than only two categories, to allow for more lenient punishments for minor drugs violations.[48] Former UN secretary general Kofi Annan and former president of Brazil Cardoso[49] argue for stepping away from the "war" approach on drugs, saying the militant approach can be counterproductive.[47] However, many others hold a hard-line preference for heavy penalization.[45]

See also edit

References edit

  This article incorporates public domain material from Brazil 2016 Crime & Safety Report: Recife. Overseas Security Advisory Council.

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crime, brazil, involves, elevated, incidence, violent, violent, crimes, brazil, homicide, rate, inhabitants, according, united, nations, office, drugs, crime, unodc, better, source, needed, brazil, highest, number, intentional, homicides, world, with, 2018, re. Crime in Brazil involves an elevated incidence of violent and non violent crimes 1 Brazil s homicide rate was 27 4 per 100 000 inhabitants according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime UNODC 2 better source needed Brazil has the highest number of intentional homicides in the world with 57 358 in 2018 In recent years the homicide rate in Brazil has begun to decline The homicide rate was 20 64 per 100 000 in 2020 with 43 879 killings similar to 2019 but down from 30 67 per 100 000 in 2017 3 Police cars of the Policia do Estado de Sao Paulo in 2017Detention in Brasilia Brazil is a central hub for the Illegal drug trade 4 Contents 1 Homicides 1 1 By Brazilian states 2 Robbery 3 Kidnapping 4 Corruption 5 Domestic violence 6 Crime dynamics 6 1 Prevention and drug war 6 2 Gangs 6 3 Drug trafficking 6 4 Penalties 7 See also 8 ReferencesHomicides editIn terms of absolute number of murders in a year Brazil has the most murders of any country by total number 62 318 followed by India 29 000 the USA 25 000 and Mexico 24 576 In 2018 Brazil had a murder rate of 24 7 per 100 000 people In 2017 Brazil had a murder rate of 29 2 per 100 000 population 5 6 There were a total of 56 101 murders in Brazil in 2017 5 Another study has the 2017 murder rate at 32 4 per 100 000 with 64 357 homicides 7 In 2016 Brazil had a record 61 819 murders or on average 168 murders per day giving a yearly homicide rate of 29 9 per 100 000 population 8 In 2017 Brazil had a record number of murders with homicides rising 4 20 with 63 880 homicides 9 10 In 2019 the anti violence NGO Rio de Paz stated that only 8 of homicides in Brazil lead to criminal convictions 11 By Brazilian states edit Further information List of Brazilian states by murder rate List of the Brazilian state capitals by homicide rate homicides per 100 000 12 Capital Region 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 changeNorthern state capitals 31 9 39 5 31 3 34 2 32 1 34 2 34 4 31 8 35 6 34 9 33 0 nbsp 3 7Belem PA 24 5 29 1 15 1 25 9 27 0 31 8 34 7 29 6 44 7 33 9 34 2 nbsp 39 7Boa Vista RR 34 6 51 5 51 4 40 4 32 1 38 2 33 0 21 5 23 1 220 25 7 nbsp 25 8Macapa AP 46 6 51 0 64 1 46 2 44 3 44 0 44 1 38 5 38 0 35 8 32 3 nbsp 30 8Manaus AM 35 3 40 7 35 3 33 0 25 2 26 5 29 3 26 2 29 4 32 3 32 5 nbsp 7 8Palmas TO 70 0 12 7 19 7 21 8 26 5 20 5 21 5 21 3 13 0 13 6 12 8 nbsp 82 5Porto Velho RO 38 3 70 3 55 5 61 0 66 9 63 2 51 1 71 4 56 4 68 5 51 3 nbsp 33 8Rio Branco AC 36 6 38 4 17 0 36 4 39 0 44 8 37 9 30 9 23 9 36 3 30 1 nbsp 17 8Northeast state capitals 40 8 33 6 30 2 34 0 39 5 39 4 41 7 40 8 44 8 49 6 52 4 nbsp 28 5Aracaju SE 19 3 16 8 35 2 39 9 60 9 54 4 50 6 47 2 40 5 46 7 38 9 nbsp 101 2Fortaleza CE 27 0 20 3 25 2 28 2 27 9 31 8 29 5 28 5 34 0 35 0 40 3 nbsp 49 5Joao Pessoa PB 33 3 38 4 36 0 37 8 41 3 42 5 44 7 42 6 48 1 48 7 56 6 nbsp 70 3Maceio AL 38 4 33 3 30 9 45 1 59 3 61 3 61 2 64 5 68 6 98 0 97 4 nbsp 153 5Natal RN 18 1 16 2 9 6 10 4 15 6 13 9 23 0 13 2 18 5 20 5 28 3 nbsp 56 4Recife PE 105 3 114 0 99 3 97 5 97 2 90 5 91 4 91 8 88 2 90 7 87 5 nbsp 16 9Salvador BA 41 6 15 4 7 9 12 9 21 3 23 2 28 6 28 5 39 7 43 7 49 3 nbsp 18 3Sao Luis MA 22 2 16 5 12 8 16 6 27 4 21 4 30 8 32 6 30 0 31 4 38 4 nbsp 73 1Teresina PI 16 9 17 6 14 0 22 2 23 2 27 8 28 5 26 0 29 4 33 5 28 2 nbsp 66 9Southeast state capitals 56 0 58 0 59 8 58 9 58 0 55 0 54 5 47 5 36 5 34 5 27 8 nbsp 50 3Belo Horizonte MG 20 7 25 0 26 8 34 8 35 0 42 9 57 6 64 7 54 4 49 9 49 5 nbsp 139 7Rio de Janeiro RJ 65 8 62 6 53 5 56 6 55 5 62 8 56 1 52 8 41 9 46 4 35 7 nbsp 45 8Sao Paulo SP 56 7 61 1 69 1 64 8 63 5 52 6 52 4 39 8 28 3 23 2 17 4 nbsp 69 4Vitoria ES 103 5 106 6 108 3 79 0 85 1 80 2 73 0 82 7 83 9 86 1 75 4 nbsp 27 1Southern state capitals 29 5 25 1 27 3 29 9 30 3 34 8 35 5 39 3 40 4 40 3 43 3 nbsp 46 4Curitiba PR 26 6 22 7 25 9 26 2 28 0 32 2 36 6 40 8 44 3 48 9 45 5 nbsp 70 7Florianopolis SC 9 4 9 3 8 9 10 2 17 0 24 7 27 1 28 9 24 4 19 4 19 5 nbsp 106Porto Alegre RS 37 2 31 4 32 9 39 2 36 5 40 5 36 4 40 3 40 1 35 5 47 3 nbsp 27 3Central West state capitals 35 3 37 7 37 6 39 2 39 1 37 4 39 3 36 8 33 4 33 4 34 1 nbsp 3 2Brasilia DF 35 6 37 4 36 7 37 5 36 9 34 7 39 1 36 5 31 9 32 3 33 5 nbsp 5 9Campo Grande MS 41 9 36 4 30 8 39 3 34 0 34 5 35 3 30 7 28 5 27 1 32 2 nbsp 23 2Cuiaba MT 55 3 76 0 68 5 69 5 76 9 52 0 49 8 45 5 44 4 40 7 38 8 nbsp 29 9Goiania GO 22 1 22 6 30 1 28 6 29 4 38 1 37 4 37 4 34 6 36 4 34 6 nbsp 56 6 nbsp Brazil state capitals 45 7 45 3 44 6 45 8 46 5 45 5 46 1 42 4 38 5 38 7 36 6 nbsp 19 8 nbsp Murdered journalist in Rio de JaneiroMurders increased during the late 2000s Bucking this trend are the two largest cities In 2008 Rio de Janeiro registered the lowest murder rate in 18 years while Sao Paulo is now approaching the 10 murders per 100 000 mark down from 35 7 in 1999 A notable example is the municipality of Diadema where crime rates fell abruptly Total murders set new records in the three years from 2009 to 2011 surpassing the previous record set in 2003 2003 still holds the record for murders per 100 000 in Brazil that year alone the rate was 28 9 13 Police records post significantly lower numbers than the health ministry Seven out of the twenty most violent cities in the world are in Brazil due to a rise in street violence 14 In descending order as of April 2018 they are Natal fourth highest homicide rate worldwide Fortaleza seventh Belem tenth Vitoria da Conquista eleventh Maceio fourteenth Aracaju eighteenth and Feira de Santana nineteenth 15 Robbery editCarjacking is common particularly in major cities Local citizens and visitors alike are often targeted by criminals especially during public festivals such as the Carnaval 16 Pickpocketing and bag snatching are common Thieves operate in outdoor markets in hotels and on public transport A trending crime known as arrastoes dragnets occur when many perpetrators act together simultaneously mug pedestrians sunbathers shopping mall patrons and or vehicle occupants stuck in traffic Arrastoes and random robberies may occur during big events Carnaval soccer games or during peak beach hours 17 Kidnapping editExpress kidnappings where people are abducted while withdrawing funds from ATM are common in major cities including Rio de Janeiro Sao Paulo Brasilia Curitiba Porto Alegre Salvador and Recife 18 Corruption editFurther information Corruption in Brazil and List of scandals in Brazil Corruption in Brazil is a pervasive social problem Brazil scored 38 on the 2016 Corruption Perceptions Index tying with India and Bosnia and Herzegovina being ranked 76th among 175 countries 19 Corruption was cited among many issues that provoked the 2013 protests in Brazil 20 Embezzlement and corruption have influenced Brazilian elections for decades however the electorate continues to vote whether out of preference or lack of choice for candidates who have been accused and in some instances convicted on charges of corruption 21 Domestic violence editFurther information Domestic violence in Brazil Between 10 and 15 women are murdered each day in Brazil 22 23 A government sponsored study found that 41 532 women were murdered in Brazil between 1997 and 2007 23 In 2012 8 of all homicide victims were female However this is still far below the male victimization rate in which men constitute 92 of homicide victims in Brazil as of 2012 24 Crime dynamics edit nbsp An overhead view of Rocinha the largest favela in Brazil Rio de Janeiro 2014 Prevention and drug war edit Brazilian drug war nbsp Brazilian Army soldiers in a street in VitoriaDate2016 ongoingLocationBrazilStatusOngoingBelligerents nbsp Brazil Brazilian Intelligence Agency nbsp Brazilian Armed Forces nbsp Brazilian Army nbsp Brazilian Navy nbsp Brazilian Marine Corps nbsp Brazilian Air ForceMinistry of Justice nbsp National Public Security Force nbsp Brazilian Federal Highway PolicePrimeiro Comando da CapitalGuardioes do EstadoTerceiro Comando PuroAmigos dos Amigos Comando VermelhoPrimeiro Grupo CatarinenseParaguayan crime groupsComando da PazBala na CaraSindicato do Crime do Rio Grande do Norte OkaidoComando Revolucionario Brasileiro da Criminalidade Familia do Norte Terceiro ComandoBrazilian police militiasCasualties and lossesMore than 44 000 deaths 25 26 27 28 29 30 A program to combat gangs and gang centered violence the Pacifying Police Units UPP was introduced in the traditionally violent favelas of Rio de Janeiro in 2008 2009 UPP personnel are well educated and trained in both human rights and modern police techniques their aim is to supplant the community presence of gangs as central community figures citation needed In 2013 34 UPP units operated in 226 different communities with a reach of 1 5 million citizens 31 The UPP program symbolizes a new crime prevention paradigm that focuses on social inclusion and community development citation needed However in some areas the homicide rate was already dropping prior to the implementation of the program Therefore the drop in crime may be due to a general trend of decline in homicides as well 5 According to Instituto de Seguranca Publica ISP data between 2007 the year before the first UPP and 2013 the violent death rate in areas with UPPs dropped by 80 a much more pronounced reduction than in the rest of the municipality clarification needed which also experienced a drop in these indices over the period The homicide rate caused by opposition to police intervention was the indicator of violence that showed the most significant reduction of almost 90 but also decreased other crimes against life and property 32 In 2014 however the violent lethality indicators rose again not only in the UPP areas but in the entire municipality Rio had not seen so many violent deaths since 2009 the first year of the UPPs Today the numbers are practically the same as in the pre UPP period In the latest survey by the Candido Mendes University Center for Security and Citizenship Studies Cesec carried out in 2014 with UPP officers researchers had already found a complete abandonment of the proximity approach and the return to repressive policing 32 According to them the lack of command control and logistics is the cause of all the problems in the Pacifying Police Units including the death of police officers in the communities 33 As of 2015 Pacifying Police Units UPPs of Rio de Janeiro are no longer useful according to specialists After more than ten years of design they are now beginning to undergo drastic changes since police officers from different units also began to patrol the streets in addition to the usual policing The lack of formalization of the program and the establishment of evaluation indicators was also a problem say the researchers The UPPs have never had an internal and systematic evaluation 32 The movement was expanded hastily in an unbridled way Between 2010 and 2013 the number of UPPs almost tripled jumping from 13 to 36 The exaggerated expansion also ended up overloading the Military Police an institution that according to Rodrigues clarification needed a former Military Police Colonel already needed and still needs structural reforms 32 The solution is beyond the police It seems a cliche but the social part has been missing since the beginning of the project evaluated the former Commander of the Military Police between 2007 and 2008 33 nbsp Change of Command Ceremony of 25 UPP Units 2013In the 7 years of the project there were several allegations of corruption and abuse of force involving UPP soldiers The most remembered among them is the torture and death of the bricklayer Amarildo de Souza The proposal however proved to be flawed due to the inexperience of these new military police officers with no apparent condition to work in former faction strongholds as was the case in Rocinha and Complexo do Alemao Burning containers lack of restrooms and armor accumulated garbage broken air conditioning was just one of the proofs that the military police were not working under ideal conditions And on at least eight bases the PMs would be working in an extreme situation 32 Former ISP Director Ana Paula Miranda also believes that during all this time an idea was made that the problems in Rio de Janeiro were over That was the first mistake Excessive advertising not taking into account the flaws throughout the project 34 Since the first UPP arrived in the Santa Marta community in Botafogo in 2008 the reality of the residents has changed not only in relation to the actions of armed groups Everything got more expensive the electricity bill started to arrive and there was no way to practice these thefts in electricity By 2015 the favela that had once a model UPP unit saw the number of homicides spike alongside the drug war 34 35 In the past the State of Rio de Janeiro had already carried out a similar attempt at occupation and for the same reasons in Ana Paula s opinion the project did not succeed and it seems the lesson was not learned The strategy is very similar There was a lack of perception that these problems would all happen later 34 In April 2017 at Complexo do Alemao a 19 6 foot high 6 0 m armored tower was installed resistant to rifles and grenade explosions to house UPP police from the Nova Brasilia community 32 As of May 2021 a new project was released by the then Governor Claudio Castro and documents obtained by the media in September showed the discussion of the project for at least 2 months Called Cidade Integrada Integrated City the new program for the occupation of communities by the Government of Rio de Janeiro in a model of public security and urban and social interventions It is not yet clear however how the police will act in this new project 36 37 Jacarezinho where there is strong influence from drug trafficking and Muzema controlled by the militia are expected to be the first to receive the program with its launch scheduled for late November or early December needs update nbsp Police officers in the favela of RocinhaGangs edit Gang violence has been directed at police security officials and related facilities Gangs have also attacked official buildings and set alight public buses 38 May 2006 Sao Paulo violence began on the night of 12 May 2006 in Sao Paulo Brazil It was the worst outbreak of violence recorded in Brazilian history and was directed against security forces and some civilian targets By 14 May the attacks had spread to other Brazilian states including Parana Mato Grosso do Sul Minas Gerais and Bahia Another outbreak of violence took place in Sao Paulo in July 2006 2016 saw a new string of deadly prison riots The nature of these riots was a turf war between the Primeiro Comando da Capital and other gangs with the PCC aggressively expanding its territory 39 40 In 2019 a prison riot between two gangs Comando Vermelho and Comando Classe A left 57 dead after hours of fighting 41 Brazilian gang members have used children to commit crimes because their prison sentences are shorter As of 2007 murder was the most common cause of death among youth in Brazil with 40 of all murder victims aged between 15 and 25 years old 42 In regard to inter gang conflict gangs typically challenge or demand an aggressive reaction to defend their reputations If someone does not respond in this manner they are socially isolated The gangs in Brazil are very territorial and focused on their illegal business Theft and robbery bring in small amounts of money compared to narcotic and weapons sales so it is less common for these gangs to get involved in petty crimes of theft or robbery 43 The gangs in Rio de Janeiro are interested in harmony because they do not want any contact with the police They will help others in the community with money and even protection just to be sure that the police do not come around Children and other members of the community see notably rich and powerful gang members and want to emulate this behavior Gang members then become a substitute for family and are role models because they have respect and money 43 It is most common for these gangs to be under a military command structure 43 Each Rio favela has one dono who controls the managers of a favela and the soldados in his territory The latter protect the favela against other drug factions and the police They are also responsible for taking over other favelas The managers of a favela control the managers of the bocas the places where drugs are sold in the favela The managers of the bocas in turn control the drug dealers who sell the drugs in the area around a boca There are children and women who wait at the entrances to a favela to signal to the others if the police or other gangs are about to enter 43 It is normal to join at about 10 years old and by 12 years old to carry weapons These gangs are attractive to the children and youth because they offer protection recognition and career options that those who join could not achieve on their own Favelas are now often controlled by juveniles and young adults 43 The concern here is of the strong ties that are between illegal business and politicians police officers the justice system and the economy Not all people are involved but all layers of society are affected because of corruption Police are bribed to not disturb what these gangs are doing and many of them are dealers themselves 43 Also young children carry guns and may be nervous aware of peer pressure or on drugs and can become careless Brutality and homicide rates have skyrocketed in countries with younger gang members like this 43 Drug trafficking edit nbsp Cracolandia land of crack in central Sao Paulo Drug trafficking makes up for an increasingly large portion of crime in Brazil A total of 27 of all incarcerations in Brazil are the result of drug trafficking charges Between 2007 and 2012 the number of drug related incarcerations has increased from 60 000 to 134 000 a 123 percent increase 32 The primary drug trafficking jobs for children and youth are endoladores packages the drugs 43 olheiro a and or fogueteiro a lookouts to provide early warning of police or any enemy drug faction invasion 43 Drug mule carries drugs to others inside their body these are unwilling members of a gang and don t survive for very long vapor drug sales persons 43 gerente da boca overseer of drug sales 43 soldado a soldiers armed and employed to maintain protection 43 fiel personal armed security guard for the gerente geral 43 gerente geral or dono owner boss 43 Avioes literally translated to little airplanes These are the children who deliver messages and drugs to customers They are not described in the hierarchal organization but they are very low entry level positions In addition those I this position have the most arrests 43 Of 325 incarcerated youth 44 of boys and 53 of girls reported some involvement with drug trafficking 43 Selling and carrying drugs were the most common activities between both boys and girls The most common drug was marijuana followed by cocaine and crack 43 From the study 74 had used marijuana 36 had snorted cocaine and 21 had used crack 43 Youth held low positions in the hierarchy and engaged in relatively low volumes of activity for short periods of time but 51 of youth involved with trafficking reported it to be very easy to obtain a gun 43 while 58 involved in trafficking reported it to be very easy to obtain cocaine 43 On 6 May 2021 at least 25 people were killed in a shootout between police and a drug dealing gang Penalties edit Criminal penalties for youths who make up a significant portion of street crime is internment in educational centers with a maximum stay of 3 years 44 Youths are not punished under the penal code but under the Brazilian Statute of the Child and Adolescent 44 For adults the consumption of drugs is nearly decriminalized but activities in any way related to the sale of drugs are illegal 45 The distinction between drug consumers and suppliers is poorly defined and thus controversial This ambiguity gives judges a high degree of discretion in sentencing and leads to accusations of discriminatory or unequal court rulings 46 Drug consumers receive light penalties varying from mandatory self education on the effects of drugs to community service The minimum sentence for a drug supplying offense is 5 to 15 years in prison 47 Critics of the consumer supplier distinction between offenses argue for a more complex categorization than only two categories to allow for more lenient punishments for minor drugs violations 48 Former UN secretary general Kofi Annan and former president of Brazil Cardoso 49 argue for stepping away from the war approach on drugs saying the militant approach can be counterproductive 47 However many others hold a hard line preference for heavy penalization 45 See also editBrazilian police militias Law enforcement in Brazil Social apartheid in Brazil Terrorism in Brazil List of assassinated Brazilian politiciansReferences edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from 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