FYI.

This story is over 5 years old.

The Brazilian Issue

A Pit Stop On The Cocaine Corridor

In 1982, Rio de Janeiro had a lower crime rate than New York City. This was the year that the Calabrian Mafia began using a South American smuggling route affectionately known as the Cocaine Corridor.

By Brian Mier, Photos By Douglas Engle

A patrol unit in the Dona Marta slum in the beachfront Botafogo district of Rio. Drug traffickers were driven out in December 2008, and as a result, young police recruits have set up permanent posts in the neighborhood. It’s part of a new community-policing program, which will be implemented in other areas if successful.

Click Here

City of God

An officer watches over the Vigario Geral favela in Rio on December 15, 2005. Police stormed the slum after drug traffickers from a nearby rival slum allegedly kidnapped eight young people. It was the latest episode in a 20-year feud between the two neighborhoods, which are run by opposing drug gangs. Shootouts between gang members and the police are common, and many innocent bystanders have fallen victim to wayward bullets. The homicide rate of Rio rivals that of some war zones.

O Dia