Pubdate: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 Source: Lexington Herald-Leader (KY) Copyright: 2002 Lexington Herald-Leader Contact: http://www.kentucky.com/mld/heraldleader/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/240 Author: Kevin G. Hall WARLORDS' PARALLEL GOVERNMENT THREATENS BRAZIL'S DEMOCRACY RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - A journalist on an investigative assignment is decapitated and dismembered. Prominent politicians are accused of ties to death squads. Warlords financed by drug money rule large swaths of territory. It sounds like Afghanistan or Pakistan, but it's happening in Brazil, a fragile democracy into which Americans have poured billions of dollars and considerable diplomatic effort. Both investments are now at risk from the lawlessness and the growing power of drug-financed gangs. Many Brazilians say theirs is a nation of two governments these days: an official one and a parallel state ruled by criminals. "They have usurped the constitutional powers of the state," said Walter Maierovitch, a former Brazilian anti-drug czar. "In a state of law, you cannot have areas controlled by criminals. This is an issue of national security." The poor slums and shantytowns of Brazil have long been no-man's lands, but the volatile mix of easily obtainable modern weaponry, corrupt police and the new violent swagger of drug traffickers are rattling a country that 17 years ago was a military dictatorship. In the favelas, or slums, of Rio de Janeiro, not far from the city's famed Copacabana and Ipanema beaches, drug-trafficking organizations with names such as the Red Command and the Third Command rule more than 1 million people, about one in five Rio residents. Outside Sao Paulo, South America's largest city, the gang-ruled slums of Jardim Angela and Capao Redondo have the highest murder rates in the world. Traffickers close down streets and schools in their domains at will. They tax storekeepers. Power and phone companies can't work without their permission. Like conventional authorities, drug lords pay salaries and benefits to foot soldiers, often teen-agers. If police or rival organizations kill one, their survivors receive the equivalent of life insurance. Last month, traffickers seized Globo TV investigative reporter Tim Lopes, Brazil's equivalent of Mike Wallace, while he was secretly filming in territory controlled by Elias Pereira da Silva, or "Crazy Elias." According to police, the powerful trafficker had Lopes shot in the leg to prevent his escape, then decapitated and dismembered with a samurai sword. The message from Crazy Elias, now the subject of a national manhunt, was clear: Don't threaten the drug trade. Gang assailants punctuated the message by spraying Rio's mayor's office a few days later with hundreds of rounds of automatic-weapons fire and two grenades that failed to explode. Mayor Cesar Maia pleaded vainly with the president for special emergency war powers to fight back, but policing in Brazil has not been a federal job. In the neighboring state of Espirito Santo, a right-wing death squad known as Scuderie Detetive le Cocq runs rampant. Brazilian congressional investigators and human-rights groups think it is involved in drug trafficking and illegal gambling. A Brazilian congressional investigation found that the group, one of whose units operates legally as a police organization, had ties to high-ranking judges and local and national politicians. The Justice Ministry's human-rights division recommended earlier this month that the federal government intervene in Espirito Santo because of the murder of a human rights lawyer and because organized crime had infiltrated democratic institutions. President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who leaves office in five months, overturned that effort, prompting Justice Minister Miguel Reale to resign July 8. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens