Rio Drug war

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Well we are use to the crime here so it seams like an every day thing. But if we lived there we would think it was a every day thing. However they do have a whole unit to deal with there shanti town(can't think of the name they use at the moment.)
 
Well we are use to the crime here so it seams like an every day thing. But if we lived there we would think it was a every day thing. However they do have a whole unit to deal with there shanti town(can't think of the name they use at the moment.)

I'm pretty sure it's an every day thing there too. Why is it that they get media attention?

We need a new Bang Bang Club.
 
So you think its proportionate to the population size? What about countries with much higher populations?
 
So you think its proportionate to the population size? What about countries with much higher populations?

Brazil has a high crime rate and a large population.
Some countries have a large population but a smaller crime rate, others we just don't hear about as often.

China and India must have many incidents, no matter how low their crime rates are, they have huge populations.

It's weird though that we rarely hear them. I read recently about a rampage killer in China. It has become quite popular over there to attack kids in rampage killings. It was not something everyone heard about, and yet there were many similar incidents, before and after the story I read, of the same style of attacks.
 
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It's weird though that we rarely hear them. I read recently about a rampage killer in China. It has become quite popular over there to attack kids in rampage killings. It was not something everyone heard about, and yet there were many similar incidents, before and after the story I read, of the same style of attacks.

Very true! It seems there is a corralation between the severity of the event per capita and media attention. Like the hundreds of thousand of farmers in the East that have committed suicide. The number hits like 150,00 and suddenly the news networks wake up.
 
Well, how do you think South Africa appeared to the world when they were killing people in the streets during the Xenophobia in 2008?

And yet we hosted the world cup in 2010.

I can imagine that it appears pretty hectic in Brazil, but it is also most likely isolated and contained incidents which are highlighted by the media in the face of the upcoming world cup soccer final there in 2014.
 
Well we are use to the crime here so it seams like an every day thing. But if we lived there we would think it was a every day thing. However they do have a whole unit to deal with there shanti town(can't think of the name they use at the moment.)

its called bope if i remember correctly

anyone who has not seen a brazillian movie called city of god, WATCH IT asap, its a masterpiece, definitely in my top 5
 
Brazil is much like S.A. Has a well crafted international image of a tourist "samba" paradise but away from the affluent areas are massive lawless shanty towns much like our own. They also had a primary school educated leftist president like Zuma which gives an indication of the mess they're in.

@Gary

Brazil got the WC for the same reason S.A did.
 
Too late Ninja's he's already forgotten.....
 
Okay here you go. Luckily it wasn't too bad.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-11704802

Formula 1 champion Jenson Button has praised the quick actions of his police driver after gunmen threatened him in Sao Paulo, Brazil on Saturday evening.

Button called him a "legend" for fleeing through traffic after at least three men brandishing machine guns approached.

Button told the Associated Press news agency the situation had been "scary".

He and the others in the car had been returning from practice for Sunday's Brazilian Grand Prix at Interlagos.

Brazil's major cities have a bad record for serious crimes of violence.

Button, 30, was travelling in the McLaren-supplied reinforced armoured vehicle back to his hotel with his father John, manager Richard Goddard, and trainer Mike Collier.

All four men were unharmed in the incident.

The reigning world champion, who will start 11th on the grid on Sunday, told AP: "The driver was a legend, a great guy, he got us out of trouble."

At a press conference later, he was reported to have said: "We got in between six cars to get past and got away.

"Looking behind there were two guys with a hand gun and one guy with what looked like a machine gun.

It was a pretty scary situation - it's not a very comfortable feeling, not great”
End Quote
Jenson Button
"It was a pretty scary situation - it's not a very comfortable feeling, not great."

Extra security

Mr Goddard said: "We were about three or four minutes away from the circuit when the incident took place.

"I would suggest there were more than four or five guys, something along those lines, who emerged from a block of flats.

"I initially saw one guy carrying this piece of wood, a baseball bat kind of thing, but I didn't spot the one who had a gun until someone pointed it out.

"It was pulled, and that was it really. You didn't really have time to think about what was happening.

"You hear about these kind of things in Sao Paulo, and because they don't come home to roost, you don't think about them. But when it almost happens to you then it's fairly worrying."

He said they were lucky to have a police driver on hand to force his way through the traffic and get them out of what could have been "quite a frightening situation".

The driver was also believed to be armed.

A McLaren spokesperson said: "The police driver of Jenson's vehicle reacted swiftly and, using avoidance techniques, rapidly forced his way through the traffic, taking Jenson and the other occupants of the car immediately away from any danger and back to their hotel."

The spokesperson added the Sao Paulo authorities had also acted efficiently and would provide additional security for Button and other team members on Sunday.

Previous attacks

Three years ago members of Toyota's F1 team escaped a similar situation when they were also approached by gunmen, BBC Formula 1 commentator David Croft said.

Formula 1 commentator Murray Walker told the BBC that gunmen previously had attempted to attack him in the same area.

He said: "There are parts of Sao Paulo which are extremely violent, and [the city] has extremes of great wealth and extreme poverty."

He said parts of the circuit were close to favelas, or shanty towns, where there was a lot of deprivation.

He said: "I suspect that's where it happened to Jenson, and naturally the people who are in the favelas see these obviously very wealthy people driving away from the circuit and they know they've got a lot of money, and they know they've got watches and things on them and that's what they're after presumably."

Former racing driver, Sir Stirling Moss told the BBC kidnap threats were not unexpected as people were aware that drivers earn millions of dollars each year.
 
Three years ago members of Toyota's F1 team escaped a similar situation when they were also approached by gunmen, BBC Formula 1 commentator David Croft said.

Formula 1 commentator Murray Walker told the BBC that gunmen previously had attempted to attack him in the same area.

He said: "There are parts of Sao Paulo which are extremely violent, and [the city] has extremes of great wealth and extreme poverty."

He said parts of the circuit were close to favelas, or shanty towns, where there was a lot of deprivation.

He said: "I suspect that's where it happened to Jenson, and naturally the people who are in the favelas see these obviously very wealthy people driving away from the circuit and they know they've got a lot of money, and they know they've got watches and things on them and that's what they're after presumably."

Former racing driver, Sir Stirling Moss told the BBC kidnap threats were not unexpected as people were aware that drivers earn millions of dollars each year.

I'm sure the Brazilian authorities will clean the place up for the duration of the 2014 WC before letting things return to normal like they did here....
 
the thing is, in Rio they can blame the violence on the drugs, and here!!!! we simply have a lot of animals running around with no respect for others lives.
 
the thing is, in Rio they can blame the violence on the drugs, and here!!!! we simply have a lot of animals running around with no respect for others lives.

You obviously have not heard of the new drug called IWUNGA (ARVs+ Rat Poison+ Washing Powder+ Ganja ). It's very popular amongst township/squatter camp youths. Recently two families were wiped out in Durban (Pinetown) by the scumbags that were high on this sh#t. It's driving them insane and they become extremely violent.
 
of course I have heard of it, basically your point is that we never had a violence problem prior to IWUNGA?


You obviously have not heard of the new drug called IWUNGA (ARVs+ Rat Poison+ Washing Powder+ Ganja ). It's very popular amongst township/squatter camp youths. Recently two families were wiped out in Durban (Pinetown) by the scumbags that were high on this sh#t. It's driving them insane and they become extremely violent.
 
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