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Brazil: Deadly Attack Rattles Rio - Rave.ca
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News (Media Awareness Project) - Brazil: Deadly Attack Rattles Rio
Title:Brazil: Deadly Attack Rattles Rio
Published On:2005-12-02
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-19 03:46:18
DEADLY ATTACK RATTLES RIO

Brazilian Officials Say A Bus Blaze That Killed Five People Was A
Retaliatory Assault By Suspected Drug Traffickers. Some Fear More Violence.

RIO DE JANEIRO - A deadly arson attack this week on a bus full of
passengers has shocked residents of a city already accustomed to
rampant crime and raised fears of a surge in violence on the cusp of
the busy tourist season.

Five people were killed and several others hurt after a gang of
suspected drug traffickers flagged down a bus, doused the interior
and those aboard with gasoline and set everything ablaze. Among the
dead were an infant and her mother, whose charred body was discovered
atop her daughter, an apparent attempt to shield her baby from the flames.

Brazilian authorities say that Tuesday night's attack was in
retaliation to the recent police killing of an alleged drug runner
from a nearby shantytown. Throughout the day, according to media
reports, the local police station had been bombarded with phone calls
from gang members vowing to wreak vengeance.

Cariocas, as residents of this popular travel destination are called,
have become partially inured to the daily accounts of muggings,
kidnappings and shootings that have marred Rio's reputation as
Brazil's cidade maravilhosa, or "marvelous city" in Portuguese. But
the brazenness and savagery of the arson attack, whose victims were
innocent bystanders in the escalating conflict between drug
traffickers and police, left many Cariocas shaken.

"Everything indicates that we are in a true civil war," a reader
named Luiz Marcondes wrote to the newspaper O Globo, in a letter
published in Thursday's editions. "When is it that government
authorities will start to intervene?"

The assault on the bus occurred at the onset of high season for the
tourism industry, one of Rio's biggest sources of revenue. Officials
are eager for nothing to alarm or dissuade visitors between now and
the close of Rio's famed Carnaval early in the new year. Authorities
normally tighten security during this period, especially on the
streets and beaches of the affluent South Zone, where well-known
neighborhoods such as Copacabana and Ipanema are located.

The arson occurred in a poor district in the northern part of the
city, wedged between several squalid hillside neighborhoods known as
favelas. These precariously perched shantytowns, home to hundreds of
thousands of people, have largely been abandoned by the state and are
ruled by heavily armed drug kingpins.

In recent years, buses have become an increasingly favored target for
drug traffickers and other criminals seeking to flaunt their defiance
of authorities.

With a combined fleet of about 7,500 vehicles, Rio's 48 private bus
companies provide the primary means of transport for the vast
majority of Cariocas. An estimated 1.4 million passengers, out of a
total population of 6 million, ride the buses daily, according to Rio
Onibus, an umbrella group representing most of the bus lines.

"We have 40,000 people who work on the city's buses, and they're all
scared," said Lelis Marcos Teixeira, the president of the
association. "What outrages us most is that this was a chronicle of a
death foretold. Why? Because there have already been 78 [assaults] this year."

Teixeira blamed the state government, which is in charge of public
safety, for failing to prioritize bus security as an urgent need. He
said that bus company owners had asked officials to map out where and
how attacks had occurred so that the firms could take action, but
nothing had as yet been done.

The companies also have requested that, after any crackdown or raid
on drug traffickers in the favelas, more police patrols be assigned
to the area in the days that follow to prevent reprisal attacks on buses.

Survivors reported that the bus was flagged down by four teenage
girls working in collusion with as many as a dozen young thugs who
then mounted the assault. After the attackers set the bus ablaze, one
passenger managed to pry open a back door, allowing terrified
victims, some of them on fire, to escape. The thugs stood to one
side, watching the bus burn and hurling rocks at the windows.

On Nov. 3, a woman was killed when suspected drug traffickers armed
with assault rifles opened fire on the bus in which she was riding on
the outskirts of the city. In February 2004, three police officers
were killed when gunmen ambushed their bus.

The danger aboard Rio's buses came to worldwide attention two years
ago with the release of the documentary "Bus 174." The film recounted
the hijacking of a bus in 2000, a hostage drama that unfolded live on
national television and ended in a botched police operation in which
both the hijacker and one of his hostages died.
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