Brazilian army takeover of Rio security, mission unclear

President Michel Temer signed a decree Friday putting the police in Rio under military command, the first such measure since the end of a two-decade military dictatorship in 1985.
A soldier stops traffic for an armored vehicle to park on a street in Rio | AP
A soldier stops traffic for an armored vehicle to park on a street in Rio | AP
Updated on
3 min read

RIO DE JANIERO: The takeover of Rio de Janeiro's security by army generals was meant to bring clarity to a city mired in chaotic crime, but three days later the exact mission remains unclear.

President Michel Temer signed a decree Friday putting the police in Rio under military command, the first such measure since the end of a two-decade military dictatorship in 1985.

Temer said it was "an extreme measure" aimed at getting a grip on runaway violence by organized gangs.

The military is widely admired in Brazil. In fact it's seen by many as just about the only institution that works properly and is not corrupt.

But does Temer really think the generals can resolve Rio's deep-rooted problems?

Critics are asking why the government is not, for example, sending more teachers to the impoverished neighborhoods where crime thrives.

"Without quality education we won't get anywhere. Nothing is done to help the young in the favelas to join the job market," said Marcos Valerio Alves, who coordinates residential associations in the Complexo do Alemao group of favelas, among the most dangerous in Rio.

"Children only go to school in the morning or in the afternoon and the rest of the time they're in the street, where they watch other young people walking about with assault rifles. What future can they have?"

- Playing politics -
Sociologist Julita Lemgruber, who specializes in security issues at the Candido Mendes University, said the army intervention "could serve as Temer's political project."

The bid to aid Rio has given Temer a welcome break in news coverage from a near constant stream of corruption scandals and his failure to push through controversial cuts to the pension system.

Although he is the most unpopular president on record, there have been growing whispers that Temer may be considering running for re-election in October.

He has previously indicated he would not try but an improving economy, after two painful years of recession, may give him new confidence.

"His popularity is rock bottom and he is trying to change the tendency to see if he could manage to be a candidate," Lemgruber said.

The problem for him, she said, is that there'll be no quick, convincing fix in Rio.

"You can get short term results but it will be difficult to reorganize the police in that period."

- Favelas in firing line -
In the favelas, where most of the violence is concentrated, many unanswered questions also remain over what military control of security will mean on the ground. 

Shootouts between rival gangs or between gangs and police are daily events in these neighborhoods. In some cases, the police are themselves accused of working with the criminals.

Can residents trust in the generals more?

"People are afraid. The decree may be nothing more than politics, but people there are in the firing line," said Anderson Franca, author of the book "Rio in Flames" and a frequent poster on social media about the situation in the favelas.

"Military intervention in Rio's security has always been violent, aggressive, repressive. I don't think the army will come to promote dialogue," he said.

"The army is not answerable to anyone and soldiers can only be tried before military tribunals, which weakens the ability to denounce police abuses."

Defense Minister Raul Jungmann raised new questions by suggesting that authority should be given for "collective arrest warrants," which would apparently allow searches for suspects to extend far beyond a single address.

At the Supreme Court, Justice Marco Aurelio Mello aired "serious doubts" in an interview with Estado de Sao Paulo newspaper about Temer's plan.

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