Brazil Gang Takes on State

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
May 11, 2002
4,039
12
0
45
#1
Brazil gang takes on state

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0516/p06s01-woam.html

The PCC reached out from São Paulo prisons to attack police, buses, and banks.

By Andrew Downie | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
RIO DE JANEIRO – The unprecedented series of attacks on law enforcement that has left as many as 74 people dead and more than 40 prisons under the control of rioting inmates marks the dramatic resurgence of a criminal gang in São Paulo. It also signals a new power struggle between police and organized crime in Brazil's biggest state, warn analysts and human rights experts.

The weekend attacks were carried out by the First Capital Command (PCC), a gang formed in the 1990s in São Paulo's notorious prison system to demand better conditions. But the PCC's audacious and ongoing attacks beyond the prison walls show they have the means to confront the state, says Renato Simoes, a human rights expert who has followed the rise of the group.

"It's a power struggle," says Mr. Simoes, reached by phone. The São Paulo congressman serves on the state's Human Rights Commission. "The PCC feels emboldened because it senses the government is weak."

The attacks began Thursday and continued into Monday, with bandits burning more than 60 buses. On Sunday, the violence spread to inmates rebelling at jails in the neighboring states of Parana and Mato Grosso do Sul.

The initial attacks were launched by PCC members angry at last week's mass transfer of 756 inmates from the state's jails. Eight of those transferred were PCC leaders. Prison officials suspected that the PCC was about to start a state-wide rebellion and they sought to frustrate their plans by moving the ringleaders.

The so called "megarebellion" was planned for Sunday, Mother's Day, when thousands of families would be inside jails visiting their loved ones. It was designed to be a repeat of the sweeping 2001 rebellion in which inmates seized control of 29 prisons and took some 25,000 people hostage.

That spectacular uprising grabbed world headlines and led law enforcement to crack down on the gang. Officials thought they had broken up most of the PCC but experts now say the group was merely lying low. The PCC has used the intervening years to regroup, both inside the jails and out.

The PCC is involved in drug trafficking, kidnapping, and armed robbery, says Bruce Bagley, a professor of international studies at the University of Miami. He says that like the organized crime groups in the slums of Rio de Janeiro, the PCC derives its power and proceeds from drug trafficking. "All of these favela groups have linkages to higher-level organized crime. For example, Fernandhino is one of the principle drug traffickers. He was captured and put in jail in Rio after selling drugs for arms with the FARC in Colombia. He's been operating out of jail with cell phones. He is attempting to consolidate power."

Professor Bagley notes that Brazil is second only to the US in cocaine consumption now. "Drug consumption and drug addiction have risen exponentially in Brazil. The fight is among these gangs and the police over turf and control of local cocaine sales, transit roots, and the laboratories they run."

While targets now, the p
lice are often complicit in the trafficking. "Clearly, professionalization, professional training, and higher salaries are key to solving Brazil's problems," Bagley says.

Simoes has called on authorities to neutralize the PCC by eliminating the atrocious prison conditions in which they thrive. Although officials do not know exactly how many of the state's 120,000 inmates belong to the PCC, Simoes says that the vast majority of jails are controlled by the group. Many inmates are terrorized into joining the gang, but like many organized crime factions, the PCC also buys loyalty by helping prisoners get lawyers, medicine, and by handing out the best jobs and cells inside the jail. Prison wardens often turn a blind eye because the gang also helps keep order.

Authorities must reform the prison system and halt the collusion between prisoners and guards that enables inmates to obtain cellphones, drugs, televisions, and other privileges, Simoes says. "Those in charge of the prison system have to take immediate action," he says.

The PCC launched the first in a series of bloody attacks on Thursday night, when bandits armed with grenades and machine guns attacked police stations and left five officers dead. The gang stepped up their attacks 24 hours later with 55 bombings, ambushes, and drive-by shootings. The violence continued Saturday with more attacks that took the death toll to 52. And on Sunday, they reportedly bombed 11 banks and a shopping center and so terrorized people using the city's transport service that several bus companies withdrew their vehicles from service. "Getting to work took a lot longer than usual because there were fewer buses," says Eulalia Perreira, a clerical worker in São Paulo, reached by phone. "I passed two or three burnt-out buses in my 40-minute journey. Everyone is scared."

The PCC did not say what they hoped to achieve with the violence other than to show they are a force to be reckoned with and they do not appear to have an explicitly political or ideological goal, experts say. "I am pessimistic," says Simoes. "The government thinks they can resolve this by making declarations and they can't. They tried this before and it didn't work."
(Photograph)
 
May 19, 2005
2,341
112
63
42
#2
ya i herd shits goin down over there.but i herd a main reason that shit hit the fans in the prisons is cause they were going to ban any showing of the world cup,confiscate personal TV's and all,and they showed that they could wreak havok from inside the prisons so they better watch out,i dunno how legit this reason is,i can see it being tru,but my friend was translating it out from hearing it from a mexican radio station
 

Y-S

Sicc OG
Dec 10, 2005
3,765
0
0
#4
Lol the soccer is a very popular sport around worldwide, mayne

especially in europe, africa...

edit: but of course it's more fun to play than watching the game or tv
 
Aug 13, 2005
522
0
16
#5
BUTCHER 206 said:
So they moved everybody to prevent a repeated "megarebellion", a lotta good that did. Man if you're serious about the soccer thing, I think they need to change the rules of soccer a little bit. That sport is all bad news: it's so fucking frustrating to see an hour and a half of back and forth, back and forth with nobody scoring or doing anything. Everybody already goes into soccer matches with all of that tension and national pride, and then to have it build up repeatedly everytime you're about to score a goal just to get let down? That's gotta be so intensely frustrating, no wonder they always riot. It'd be like if in the superbowl one team got to the 1 yard line but turned over on downs, then the other team made it to the 1 yard line and turned over on downs, repeated and repeated over and over. I don't get how anybody can watch that sport o.0 too stressful an uneventful for me
some of the best matches i have seen were 0-0 ties, soccer is different it aint like football, a 0-0 match can be very entertaining
 

pAc0

Sicc OG
Feb 8, 2006
2,174
64
0
63
#6
the early stages of this civil fight is between the poor and the rich....the poor being the gangmembers taking matters into their own hands because police fear those favelas(aka shanty towns) that the government has ignored. Read an article on favelas and you'll see the life they live.... brazilian favelas make u.s. hoods look like disneyland. I ain't no joke livin in the outskirts of Sao Paulo or Rio where all the poor people are set aside so the middle and upper class can continue living their everyday normal lives.

check out daveyd.com(great site btw) where i found about more about shantytowns and their roots......City of God is also a great film...but viewers beware.

got this from daveyd's website.........

Brazilian Hip Hop
by - by Vee Bravo of Stress Magazine
3/28/01 6:42:38 AM
I just came back from Brasil, where I spent the last14 days learning and absorbing Sao Paulo's and Rio de Janeiro's thriving Hip Hop culture. I could sit here and write the story, but I&Mac226;ll be brief. In the words of DAZE and my man Carlos who traveled with me on this fantastic journey, Hip Hop in Sao Paulo is reminiscent of New York City, late 70s, and early 80s. Amidst a city populated by over 23 million people, the vast majority living in poverty, black and brown faces fill the clubs, dancing till 6 in the morning. DJs play everything from Brasilian Hip Hop to Samba Rock to US underground cuts by Jurassic 5 and Talib Kweli. Being part of a b-boy crew is like being part of a little league team. Every neighborhood has one. On Saturdays and Sundays, there are open and friendly competitions. Throughout the school week kids can attend B-boy workshops sponsored by the Sao Paulo Zulu Nation chapter. People have very little sources, but I'm convinced that it's the soul of Black culture born out of resistance that gives this movement that raw energy that in my opinion is unmatched by anything I've seen in my short life. People gravitate towards Hip Hop because it's the only way poor young people can express themselves freely. It's not some backpack crew, soho vibe. White people are not really into it because the masses (poor black and brown people) are adamant about their creative, and in some instances, business ownership.

I must admit, I chocked at the sight of the favelas. Shantytowns set up as never ending labyrinths. No running water, few power outlets, and no support from the government. Here, drug dealers run the show, controlling who comes in and out. Yet, they're the only ones that finance the community centers and the rebuilding of dilapidated housing. Prior to our trip, not one media outlet, not one, national or international, was allowed to enter the favelas. MCees Mano Brown and MV Bill were kind enough to let me in and document this scene. While in the favela a young kid whipped out a copy of Stress (CNN cover). Stress in a favela, an issue with a print run of 30,000! That's when it hit me. I was granted access on the strength of our work, not our status. People felt comfortable with us. They told me that most journalist want to come in to exploit their poverty. Obviously, that wasn't our mission. I felt a tremendous honor and joy to say the least.

And the block parties. Only poor people can take nothing and turn it into something. Unfortunately, someone will commercialize it. Back to the block parties. Samba and Hip Hop, young and old people dancing in the streets or in someone's back yard. Someone collects the money for the food and drinks, while someone arranges that there's a swimming pool for the kids. All love, no fights. Beautiful people everywhere.

Can't forget the graffiti writers. Os Gemeos, twin brothers single handedly decorating the streets of Sao Paulo with murals that tell a nation's history. Kids are so broke, they're rocking fill-ins with paint brushes!

I encourage everyone to make the pilgrimage to South America. Most of my colleagues who have roots in these countries spend more time traveling to Europe where Hip Hop first entered because of the market potential it had. Charlie Ahearn's Wild Style and Belafonte's Beat Street had distribution outlets as in France and Germany as early as 1985. I don't think these directors were interested in South America then and now. Most people simplistically eroticize South America through fictional notions of women and indigenous people roaming the jungle. But to many others, and me it's our community. These countries have direct historical relationships with poor people of color in the US. Why not spend time building with your long lost elders, brothers, sisters, and cousins?

Peace,
vb
 

pAc0

Sicc OG
Feb 8, 2006
2,174
64
0
63
#7
also check out "Favela Rising" documentary so you can get a better understanding of these favelas.....it's going to air on HBO/CINEMAX(i think) and it's going to be released on DVD by the end of the year. I could be wrong so don't take my word for it......