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 Rio's Shadow Empires: How Gangs Turned Favelas Into Lucrative Prisons
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) In the vibrant yet volatile city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil's Comando Vermelho (CV)-a criminal syndicate born in the 1970s from prison alliances between common thugs and political dissidents-has transformed from drug peddlers into sophisticated territorial overlords.
Once reliant on the risky cocaine and marijuana trade, facing constant rival threats and police busts, the CV now mimics paramilitary militias, often ex-cops gone rogue, to dominate poor hillside neighborhoods called favelas.
This shift, emerging over the past decade amid weakened militias and overlooked urban gaps, locks residents into a web of extortion, yielding predictable profits that dwarf drug earnings.
Picture this: in vast complexes like Penha and Alemão, home to tens of thousands, gangs erect barricades from stolen train tracks and concrete drums-7,000 tons removed by authorities in 2024 alone.
These walls not only repel police armored vehicles but seal off outside competition. Drones with night-vision hover overhead, monitoring every move.
Rio's Shadow Empires: How Gangs Turned Favelas into Lucrative Prisons
Inside, the CV enforces monopolies:
 
Even cigarette smuggling thrives, banning legal brands and raking in R$175 million yearly in Rio, part of a R$5 billion national mafia since 2015.
The backstory? As militias splintered from arrests, the CV seized western zones like Jacarepaguá in bloody clashes-684 deaths in two years-re-registering residents to levy condo fees on illegal high-rises.
Money launders through coerced bank deposits (one scheme hid R$100 million) and unregistered favela properties, like a leader's 60 uniform houses for rentals.
A massive October 28 police raid killed 121, seized 100 rifles, but key figures escaped, highlighting entrenched power.
This isn't just crime; it's a parallel state trapping the poor in poverty and fear, where refusing fees means torture or worse.
For outsiders, it unveils Brazil's urban underbelly: how lax oversight lets gangs erode freedoms, while stronger security measures could reclaim communities from this grip.
 Once reliant on the risky cocaine and marijuana trade, facing constant rival threats and police busts, the CV now mimics paramilitary militias, often ex-cops gone rogue, to dominate poor hillside neighborhoods called favelas.
This shift, emerging over the past decade amid weakened militias and overlooked urban gaps, locks residents into a web of extortion, yielding predictable profits that dwarf drug earnings.
Picture this: in vast complexes like Penha and Alemão, home to tens of thousands, gangs erect barricades from stolen train tracks and concrete drums-7,000 tons removed by authorities in 2024 alone.
These walls not only repel police armored vehicles but seal off outside competition. Drones with night-vision hover overhead, monitoring every move.
Rio's Shadow Empires: How Gangs Turned Favelas into Lucrative Prisons
Inside, the CV enforces monopolies:
cooking gas jumps from a statewide average of R$97 to R$150 per bottle;
internet and cable become "CVNet" exclusives;
1,500 mototaxis in Rocinha pay R$150 weekly, funneling over R$1 million monthly to the bosses.
Even cigarette smuggling thrives, banning legal brands and raking in R$175 million yearly in Rio, part of a R$5 billion national mafia since 2015.
The backstory? As militias splintered from arrests, the CV seized western zones like Jacarepaguá in bloody clashes-684 deaths in two years-re-registering residents to levy condo fees on illegal high-rises.
Money launders through coerced bank deposits (one scheme hid R$100 million) and unregistered favela properties, like a leader's 60 uniform houses for rentals.
A massive October 28 police raid killed 121, seized 100 rifles, but key figures escaped, highlighting entrenched power.
This isn't just crime; it's a parallel state trapping the poor in poverty and fear, where refusing fees means torture or worse.
For outsiders, it unveils Brazil's urban underbelly: how lax oversight lets gangs erode freedoms, while stronger security measures could reclaim communities from this grip.
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