Pubdate: Sun, 27 Apr 2003 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2003 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Larry Rohter RIO'S DRUG WARS BEGIN TO TAKE TOLL ON TOURISM RIO de JANEIRO - THE long-standing war between municipal authorities here and the drug trafficking gangs that control many of the city's teeming squatter slums has escalated to the point that tourist sites are affected. Early this month, gunmen fired at the train station where visitors leave for the statue of Christ atop Corcovado Mountain, one day after a bomb went off just outside a luxury hotel in Copacabana. Both incidents took place in predawn hours and no visitors or local residents were injured, leading city officials to argue that the attacks were intended not to disrupt tourism but to intimidate them into easing up on their campaign to crush powerful criminal organizations. But threats have also been made against Sugar Loaf, another tourist site, famous for its spectacular views, and shopping malls, police stations and buses have been attacked. Gang leaders have issued statements saying that their offensive is a reprisal for harsh conditions imposed on jailed drug lords and have demanded to meet with the governor of Rio de Janeiro State, vowing to intensify the state of public insecurity here until their demands are met. The city government is urging calm, describing the incidents as isolated and arguing that the risk has been exaggerated by a jittery media. "This sort of thing can happen in any large city," said Rubem Medina, the Secretary of Tourism for the city of Rio de Janeiro. "I've been mugged myself in New York City right near Times Square." Thanks largely to the wealth they have earned from drug trafficking over the past 20 years, criminal groups, with names like the Red Command, now physically control many of the city's principal favelas, or poor squatter communities. They boast that they have become a "parallel power," and to demonstrate their strength and the government's weakness, they periodically force stores, banks, schools, offices and markets not to open for business. "If these episodes continue at tourist attractions, the consequences could be grave," Sergio Ricardo de Almeida, director of a newly formed Integrated Committee for Tourist Security, said. "The proper precautions have been taken, but since the government is combating the gangs with force, they are also going to react with force." Criminologists at universities here, along with other independent security experts, say that the risk of violence is indeed likely to continue, in tourist areas as well as others. For instance, two rival gangs in a pair of hillside slums overlooking Copacabana and Ipanema are said to be fighting over the lucrative drug trade in those neighborhoods. The police delegate in charge of tourist security, Elizabeth Cayres, said she was under orders not to talk to the news media about the situation. The Secretary of Public Security of the state of Rio de Janeiro, Col. Josias Quintal, did not respond to requests for an interview. To counteract the growing threat, the police have announced a doubling of the special battalion for tourist security, to 400 officers, and the shifting of other units to "uninterrupted, round-the-clock patrols at main hotels and tourist sites," Mr. Medina said. In addition, more money has been set aside to equip, train and pay better salaries to police units assigned to protect tourists. Individual hotels, tourist attractions and shopping malls are also acting on their own. After a grenade was thrown at the popular Rio Sul shopping center in Botafogo and police assigned an additional patrol car to the area, the mall management doubled its security force, the police said. The bomb that went off outside the nearby Meridien Hotel, on April 2, at the junction of two of the busiest streets in Copacabana, was described as not very powerful, but it was enough to startle those who heard it. On April 14, the historic Hotel Gloria, near downtown, was sprayed with machine-gun fire by two carloads of men. The attack on the Corcovado train station followed an incident in March in which a well-known Brazilian actor and two American friends were reported to have been robbed by six men with machine guns while on an access road that leads to the statue. The exact location is in dispute, but the three said they were robbed of money and cameras, according to local news media. Conditions at Corcovado may also have been complicated by a new mechanized transport system inaugurated in January. Intended to make access simpler, it appears to have made the process more cumbersome and to have left the estimated 1,800 daily visitors to the site more vulnerable. In the past, visitors could drive to the summit and its sweeping views in a private car, an option that was especially attractive to elderly and disabled people. Now private cars are not allowed, and visitors who who cannot afford taxis must wait for trains, which depart every half-hour, and stand in line for an elevator to the summit; they no longer have the option of arriving and leaving at times convenient to them. Mr. Medina promised that some of those deficiencies will be corrected soon. "By the end of the year, we will have two new parking lots near the top for people to leave cars and will have buses to take them the rest of the way to the summit," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth