Reinventing Rio
The dazzling but tarnished Brazilian city gets a makeover as it prepares for the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games
- By Alan Riding
- Photographs by Eduardo Rubiano Moncada
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2010, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 6)
The reputation of Rio’s police was little better. Many were thought to be on the traffickers’ payroll. A December 2009 report by the New York City-based Human Rights Watch accused police officers of routinely executing detainees they claimed had been killed resisting arrest. In some favelas, police have driven out the traffickers—only to set up their own protection rackets.
Fernando Gabeira is one politician with direct experience of urban warfare. In the late 1960s, having joined leftist guerrillas fighting Brazil’s military dictatorship, he participated in kidnapping the American ambassador, Charles Burke Elbrick. Elbrick was released after he was swapped for political prisoners, while Gabeira was himself arrested and then freed in exchange for another kidnapped foreign diplomat. When Gabeira returned to Brazil after a decade in exile, he was no longer a militant revolutionary and soon won a seat in Congress representing the Green Party. Having narrowly lost in Rio’s mayoral elections in 2008, he plans to challenge Sérgio Cabral’s bid for re-election as state governor in October.
“The principal characteristic of the violence is not drugs, but the occupation of territory by armed gangs,” Gabeira said over lunch, still dressed in beach clothes. “You have 600,000 to 1 million people living in favelas outside the control of the government. And this is the state government’s responsibility.” Like many experts, he rejects the automatic link between poverty and violence. “My view is that we should combine social action and technology,” he said. “I suggested we use drones to keep an eye on the traffickers. I was laughed at until they shot down a police helicopter.”
The downing of the helicopter last October took place just two weeks after the city was chosen to host the 2016 Olympics, following Governor Cabral’s assurances to the International Olympic Committee that army and police reinforcements would guarantee the security of athletes and the public. After the helicopter was shot down, Cabral threw his weight behind a new strategy designed by the state’s security secretary, José Beltrame.
Starting in the South Zone, Cabral ordered the state government to establish a permanent police presence—so-called Police Pacification Units—in some favelas. After police were met by gunfire, they began a policy of leaking to the media which favela they would next target, giving traffickers time to leave and, it soon transpired, to invade favelas farther inland.
One morning I visited Pavão, Pavãozinho and Cantagalo, a three-community favela overlooking Copacabana and Ipanema, which has been peaceful since this past December. First settled a century ago, the favela has a population estimated at 10,000 to 15,000. A cable car built in the 1980s takes residents up the slope and returns with garbage in cans. It has a primary school, running water and some drainage. For years, it was also a drug stronghold. “There were constant gun battles,” recalled Kátia Loureiro, an urban planner and financial director of a community organization called Museu de Favela. “There were times when we all had to lie on the floor.”
Today, heavily armed police stand at the favela’s entrance, while others patrol its narrow alleys and steep steps. After visiting the local school and a boxing club, I came across the Museu de Favela, which was founded two years ago to empower favela residents to develop their community and improve living conditions. Even during the bad times, it organized courses to train cooks, waiters, seamstresses, craftsmen and artists. Now it offers tours of its “museum,” which is what it calls the entire favela. Says the group’s executive director, Márcia Souza: “The idea is, ‘My house is in the favela, so I am part of the museum.’”
My visit began with a rooftop performance by Acme, the stage name of a local rapper and Museu founder. “We don’t need more cops,” he told me, “we need more culture, more rap, more graffiti, more dance.” The Museu sees social exclusion, not violence, as the problem in the favelas.
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Related topics: Crime Poverty Renovation and Restoration Brazil
Additional Sources
“Gangland; Who Controls the Streets of Rio de Janeiro?” John Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, Oct. 5, 2009









Comments (7)
"The beaches are also strikingly heterogeneous: people of all income levels and colors mix comfortably"
It is good that there are no armed clashes between races over beach blanket space, but it would be extremely unusual to have a major public beach with zero crime and for that crime to have no demographic characteristics. As for as the teeming shantytowns, the best measure of progress would be a decline in their populations, as well as in Rio generally.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on January 9,2012 | 11:49 PM
My 23 year old daughter has lived in Copacabana since July of this year. Initially apprehensive, she has adapted to her surroundings and remains aware of what occurs around her. I read this article with great interest, and have found that much of what has been written here supports her tales of 'life in Rio'...not exactly what she expected, but interesting and lively all the same.
Posted by Cindy on October 20,2010 | 11:17 PM
Never having been to Rio, I found this article fascinating. To see an entire city, for the most part, see the good in their environment and want to, as a group, improve upon what has already been done is so positive. I wish my city would be able to unite with that type of vision in mind.
Posted by Barbara Mongan on October 4,2010 | 09:38 PM
Current event
Posted by Mrs. Pullen on October 1,2010 | 04:10 PM
It's interesting that Río has the opportunity to be shown as a modern and pacific city; However, until I read this article, I had no idea Rio was seen as an abandoned and dangerous city. As an average person, I have (had) the idea that Río is a fun place to live in, great known for it's beaches and festivals.
Posted by Luis on September 15,2010 | 09:27 PM
I live in Rio, and I have lived in many other places in the world, including Metropolitan Detroit, Michigan.
From my perspective, generally speaking, I don't see a whole lot of differences between Rio's problems and those of the City of Detroit (and other cities in the world), the only exceptions being that Rio is full of life and beauty and many friendly people and Detroit is not.
Posted by Susan on August 28,2010 | 06:20 AM
Terrible!
Posted by Alex on August 23,2010 | 03:23 PM