Pubdate: Sun, 19 Aug 2012 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2012 The Associated Press Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Juliana Barbassa DRUG BOSSES IN RIO SLUMS SAY "NO" TO CRACK COCAINE RIO DE JANEIRO - Business was brisk in the Mandela shantytown on a recent night. Customers pawed through packets of powdered cocaine and marijuana priced at $5, $10, $25. Teenage boys with semiautomatic weapons took in money and made change while flirting with girls lounging nearby. Next to them, a gaggle of kids jumped on a trampoline, oblivious tothe gunsanddrug-running that are part of life in this and hundreds of other slums, known as favelas, across this metropolitan area of 12 million people. Conspicuously absent from the scene was crack, the most addictive and destructive drug in the triad that fuels Rio's lucrative narcotics trade. Once crack was introduced here about six years ago, Mandela and surrounding shantytowns became Rio's main outdoor drug market, a "cracolandia," or crackland, where users bought the rocks, smoked and lingered until the next hit. Hordes of addicts lived in cardboard shacks and filthy blankets. Now, there was no crack on the wooden table displaying the goods for sale, and the addicts were gone. The change hadn't come from any police or public health campaign. Instead, the dealers have stopped selling the drug in Mandela and nearby Jacarezinho in amove that traffickers say will spread citywide within the next two years. The drug bosses, often born and raised in the very slums they now lord over, say crack destabilizes their communities. Law enforcement and city authorities, however, take credit for the change, arguing that drug gangs are only trying to create a distraction and persuade police to call off an offensive to take back the slums. Dealers shake their heads, insisting it was their decision to stop selling crack, the crystalized form of cocaine. "Crack has been nothing but a disgrace for Rio. It's time to stop," said the drug boss in charge. He is Mandela's second-in-command. At 37, he is an elder in Rio's most established faction, the Comando Vermelho, or Red Command. He's wanted by police and didn't want his name published. Although crack makes him a lot of money, he has his own reasons to resent the drug. "I see this misery," he said. "I'm a human being, too, and I'm a leader here. I want to say I helped stop this." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom