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Brazil army, police in Rio favela drug swoop

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About 1,000 Brazilian police and soldiers early Friday began a large-scale operation to hunt drug traffickers linked to recent violence in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro.

Backed by armored vehicles, the operation in northern Rio's Morro dos Macacos favela aims to capture 31 suspected traffickers, Rio's state security services said.

Soldiers surrounded the favela and deployed at strategic locations while civil and military police searched for suspects as anxious residents watched.

Authorities reported an initial 11 arrests.

The latest operation comes two weeks after Defense Minister Raul Jungmann sent 950 troops to the country's biggest favela, Rocinha, to back police after heavily armed drug traffickers, spraying bullets, rampaged through the teeming cluster of small houses on hillsides overlooking wealthy western Rio.

Violence is common in favelas, where drug gangs control much of the territory and police are forced to remain on permanent alert.

The situation spun dramatically out of control in Rocinha when members of a drug gang poured in and tried to push out rivals.

Security forces remained in the favela for nearly a week.

Authorities suspect gang members who fled that operation sought refuge in Morro dos Macacos.

These bandits "not only participated in the first incursion (at Rocinha) but in fact represent an important group of the 'Amigos dos Amigos' faction in the northern zone," police spokesman Marcos Vinicius Braga told GloboNews TV.

"So it's possible that this (favela) serves as their base for future incursions."

Security for Rio's roughly 6.5 million residents has declined steadily since last year's Olympic Games.

About 1,000 Brazilian police and soldiers early Friday began a large-scale operation to hunt drug traffickers linked to recent violence in the favelas of Rio de Janeiro.

Backed by armored vehicles, the operation in northern Rio’s Morro dos Macacos favela aims to capture 31 suspected traffickers, Rio’s state security services said.

Soldiers surrounded the favela and deployed at strategic locations while civil and military police searched for suspects as anxious residents watched.

Authorities reported an initial 11 arrests.

The latest operation comes two weeks after Defense Minister Raul Jungmann sent 950 troops to the country’s biggest favela, Rocinha, to back police after heavily armed drug traffickers, spraying bullets, rampaged through the teeming cluster of small houses on hillsides overlooking wealthy western Rio.

Violence is common in favelas, where drug gangs control much of the territory and police are forced to remain on permanent alert.

The situation spun dramatically out of control in Rocinha when members of a drug gang poured in and tried to push out rivals.

Security forces remained in the favela for nearly a week.

Authorities suspect gang members who fled that operation sought refuge in Morro dos Macacos.

These bandits “not only participated in the first incursion (at Rocinha) but in fact represent an important group of the ‘Amigos dos Amigos’ faction in the northern zone,” police spokesman Marcos Vinicius Braga told GloboNews TV.

“So it’s possible that this (favela) serves as their base for future incursions.”

Security for Rio’s roughly 6.5 million residents has declined steadily since last year’s Olympic Games.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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