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Swarming Thieves Wreak Havoc On Famed Rio Beaches

Municipal guards with batons chase a mob of thieves that snatched bags and wallets from beachgoers on Arpoador beach, adjacent to Ipanema, in Rio de Janeiro on Nov. 20.
Marcelo Carnaval
/
AP
Municipal guards with batons chase a mob of thieves that snatched bags and wallets from beachgoers on Arpoador beach, adjacent to Ipanema, in Rio de Janeiro on Nov. 20.

Amanda Maia was visiting Rio de Janeiro for the weekend earlier this month with her mother. It was a sunny day and so they went to Ipanema beach to catch some rays. She says she noticed a few groups of kids.

"There were lots of gangs, about 10, 15 children each; they were about 10 or 12 years old," Maia recalls.

At first, she says, they were just roaming the streets, checking people out. The ones she saw were smoking marijuana, too.

According to video shot about the same time, the gangs suddenly swept over the beach, stealing phones and snatching jewelry.

It's called an arrastao, or dragnet. In one incident captured by the Globo network video, a group of boys converges on a hapless beachgoer, pushes her to the ground and takes her bag. Police wielding sticks chase the robbers, but the kids run into the sea to evade capture.

"There was plenty of police there; that's the point — they don't care about the police," Maia says. "It's also really difficult for the police to work on the beach because the beach is really large and there are lots of people on the beach. They cannot run on the sand."

These dragnets were a huge problem in Rio in the 1990s. The fact that they are back, Rio residents say, points to an uptick in crime in the city by the sea.

There have been two episodes of mob thefts on Ipanema in November, and recent months have seen a grenade attack on a city bus and a wave of muggings. Homicides have increased almost 19 percent this August compared with last year. An American woman was badly beaten this month when a gang stole her bicycle.

All this is happening despite the city's pacification program. In advance of the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympics in 2016, Rio has sent police units to reside in some of its most violent shantytowns to bring down crime.

Jose Mariano Beltrame, Rio's public security secretary, has promised that more police would be put in place to make Rio's beaches safer.

But analysts say the gangs are pushing back after losing territory because of the pacification program. High-profile criminal acts like this embarrass the local government and get a global audience because of what it says about security in advance of the mega-events — and the arrival of hundreds of thousands of tourists.

Maia, the out-of-town beachgoer, says she was terrified after what she saw. She says she went straight back to her hotel and spent the weekend huddled in her room, ordering her food to be delivered from nearby restaurants.

She returned to her native Sao Paulo — not exactly a safe city in itself — convinced that the situation in Rio is only going to get worse.

"It's a bomb that is going to explode," she says.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Lulu Garcia-Navarro is the host of Weekend Edition Sundayand one of the hosts of NPR's morning news podcastUp First. She is infamous in the IT department of NPR for losing laptops to bullets, hurricanes, and bomb blasts.
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