Conquering Complexo do Alemão
A big step towards reclaiming Rio de Janeiro from the drug dealers
IT WAS a moment that residents of Rio de Janeiro thought would never come. For decades many of the city's favelas have been ruled by drug traffickers or militias. Sporadic flare-ups would see the police go in to these self-built settlements seeking revenge, only to pull back leaving bodies scattered and the gangs to return to business. But last month when the city's two main drug gangs began hijacking and torching vehicles at gunpoint, this time the authorities' response was different.
The state governor, Sérgio Cabral, ordered jailed gang leaders suspected of masterminding the mayhem moved to distant high-security prisons. He also asked the federal government for help. On November 25th police, backed by marines and armoured vehicles, pushed into Vila Cruzeiro, which forms part of Complexo do Alemão, a cluster of a dozen favelas in the north of the city. Brazilians were riveted by live television coverage of dozens of gun-toting gangsters fleeing across a hillside to the heart of Complexo do Alemão. The army arrived and encircled the entire Complexo. At dawn on November 28th police and troops went in and, after a firefight, took control. At least 37 people died in the clashes, several of them bystanders.
This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “Conquering Complexo do Alemão”
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