Violence and impunity in Brazil
The murder of a Rio politician shines a light on Brazils security crisis
about 3 hours ago
The assassination of an elected official represents a challenge to any democracy. But the brutal murder of Rio de Janeiro city council member Marielle Franco and her driver Anderson Gomes comes at a particularly critical moment for Brazils federal government.
Last month President Michel Temer ordered the military to take over responsibility for public security in the state of Rio following a resurgence by violent drug gangs. Having done so the government must now ensure that a thorough investigation to identify the killers of this well-planned crime is carried out as soon as possible.
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Brazilian police are the most lethal in the world, according to Amnesty International, and Rios are the deadliest in Brazil. Yet this dubious achievement has spectacularly failed to provide greater public security, as the latest deployment of troops in Rio proves.
This lethality is also highly discriminatory. Most police victims are, like Franco, poor and black. Impunity has not only fuelled this culture of violence but also licensed police corruption. Militarising the police has only made many Brazilian citizens more vulnerable to abuses and an early death at the hands of agents of the state. Without also undertaking a thorough police reform Temers use of the military will prove to be another short term-fix to a deeply entrenched problem.
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https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/editorial/violence-and-impunity-in-brazil-1.3439612