A year of frustrated protest against an intransigent government has released a wave of pent-up inter-community violence
In Brazil there is a saying: "A good thief is a dead thief."
These words have never been more relevant in today's Brazilian
class-ridden landscape, where prejudice, violence and racism run free.
The last week has been full of violent acts in Rio de Janeiro. Once again, police and protesters clashed during a protest in the centre of the city. A few days earlier a teenage boy was beaten, stripped naked and tied to a lamp post
by a group of vigilantes for allegedly mugging people in the street. A
video of a white man pre-emptively accusing a black, poorly dressed
youth of intent to mug him has gone viral.
All Brazilians, black and white, rich and poor, are terrified of the
aggressive atmosphere. The confrontations are no longer people versus
authority; they have become people versus people.
And senior media
figures have backed the vigilantes taking justice into their own hands.
This week Rachel Scheherazade, the SBT news anchor, said their actions
were "understandable", and that if people were pro-human rights they
should "do Brazil a favour and adopt a thief". She made these
declarations on national primetime TV.
To many, the statistics justify the violent backlash: between 2007 and 2013 more than 33,000 people were murdered in Rio, 1,070 as a consequence of being mugged. Even more frighteningly, 5,412 people died in conflicts with the police.
As
the government focuses on the World Cup to please the international
community, it neglects the people even more than usual, and things are
bound to get worse. Brazil is already the fourth most unequal country in Latin America(according to the United Nations).
The
recent crime waves, in particular in the Rio neighbourhood of Flamengo,
where the black teenager was attacked, are a direct result of the
population's rage that flared up last June. The government's attempt to
raise bus fares once again has acted as a reminder that, since last
year's protests, things have got worse, not better.
Perhaps people
have realised that protesting takes them nowhere, except for gaining
short-term change. The government is sending a clear message: we will do
whatever we like and your protests can't stop us. This message has
become dangerous because people now feel entitled to steal, to use
violence and to torture any perpetrators the police fail to arrest.
And
there will always be innocent people who suffer. On Thursday, a
cameraman was hit in the head by an explosive, allegedly a police bomb,
after a protest turned violent. He is in a coma.
The war is high income versus low income. While people from the favelas
are driven to crime because of their lack of opportunities, middle
class people become increasingly scared of violence and concerned for
their security. Rage against the government is turning the population
against each other and, despite Rio's glorious sunshine, the atmosphere
is of fear and sadness for a city of such potential.
Ultimately,
though support for torture and violence is horrifying, the social
problems in Brazil are much deeper than vigilantes doing what they think
is right. It is not a simple matter of killing a criminal because he is
inherently evil; hundreds of years of oppression, racism and government
neglect cannot be glossed over with a simple decision not to raise bus
fares.
• This article was amended on 9 February 2014. It
originally stated that Brazil was the fourth most unequal country in the
world – this should have read fourth most unequal in Latin America. In
addition, the figure of 33,000 murders does not apply to 2013 alone, as
originally stated, but to 2007-2013. These errors have now been
corrected.
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