Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Displaced Palestinians hope to return home amid ceasefire talks
  • Tunisia pardons man sentenced to death over Facebook posts
  • Two years into its war on Gaza, Israel is fractured, isolated: Analysts
  • What is Insurrection Act, could it help Trump deploy troops to US cities?
  • Fifth French PM quits in three years: Can Macron survive, and what’s next?
  • Pope Leo plans symbolic debut foreign trips to Turkiye and Lebanon
  • Malaysia football federation to fight FIFA sanctions for cheating claims
  • Myanmar activists to sue Norway’s Telenor for handing data to military
  • Is Donald Trump trying to dial back tensions with Brazil?
  • Gaza girl removes ‘stray bullet’ after being injured by an Israeli drone
  • What caused Nepal’s devastating flood damage and how was it contained?
  • Outgoing French PM launches last-gasp bid to quell political crisis
  • Japanese football official sentenced for viewing child pornography images
  • Video: Search for bodies called off after Indonesia school collapse
  • Farah and Myriam: Childhood Under Siege in Gaza
  • The second year of genocide was different
  • French lawmaker “beaten” by Israeli police
  • Al Jazeera reporter reflects on two years of war in Gaza
  • Fighting reported in Syria’s Aleppo between army and SDF
  • Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to trio for quantum mechanics discoveries
  • The young children killed by Israeli fire this year in occupied West Bank
  • Israel’s attempt to annihilate Gaza
  • 77-year-old Indian professor campaigns for Gaza every day
  • Gaza in a thousand faces: Two years of Israel’s genocide
  • US and China provoke sharp fall in global outlook for renewable power

In Pictures: Crackdown in Brazil’s favelas

By Al Jazeera Published 2014-04-03 11:11 Updated 2014-04-03 11:11 Source: Al Jazeera

Just a few months before Rio de Janeiro welcomes visitors for the World Cup, and two years before it hosts the Olympics, security within the city remains a major issue.

The government currently promotes the policy of “pacification”, where security forces engage in raids, drug busts, and even gunfights with suspected gang members. This pacification policy is supposed to pave the way for the development of long-neglected favelas in Rio, Brazil’s second-biggest city and home to 11 million people.

Rio’s government has established the Pacifying Police Unit, a military police team with the intent of establishing security and diminishing criminality with force.

These police units stand at the centre of Rio Governor Sergio Cabral Filho’s security strategy. They have set up permanent stations in the working class areas or favelas in order to conduct routine patrols and to be able to quickly respond to gang activity, such as Comando Vermelho and Amigos dos Amigos (ADA), two large and often violent criminal organisations. There are now approximately 34 Pacifying Police Units in Rio, controlling more than 100 favelas where hundreds of thousands reside. 

However, many of the favelas remain in the hands of an army of drug dealers and criminals who are not willing to step down or be pacified.