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Criminal Factions Push Deeper Into The Amazon: Border Towns Drown In Cheap Cocaine
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Along Brazil's triple border with Peru and Colombia, the drug trade is no longer just passing through. Criminal factions are turning river towns and Indigenous villages into“mini-cracolândias” – permanent open-air drug scenes.
At the center is óxi, a crude paste made from cocaine leftovers mixed with solvents. Smoked like crack but cheaper and faster-acting, it allows gangs to hook poor, young users; local officials say many addicts buy only this refuse.
Cartografias da Violência na Amazônia identifies at least 17 criminal factions across“Amazônia Legal.” Nearly half of the region's municipalities have faction presence, with the Comando Vermelho dominating much of this map.
The forest has become a logistics hub where rivers move cocaine and skunk toward Brazil 's big cities and foreign markets. Alto Solimões, with a majority Indigenous population and chronic poverty, shows how fragile communities pay the price.
Most locals depend on social-assistance programs and few hold formal jobs. In that vacuum, micro-trafficking offers quick“work,” and debts to gangs lock teenagers into the trade.
Amazon mini-cracolândias fuel addiction and violence
Researchers describe mini-cracolândias in Tikuna communities such as Umariaçu and Belém do Solimões, with adolescents gathering at night as music, drugs and alcohol circulate, and even women with small children present.
Families say they are losing teenagers first to addiction, then to petty crime, while police and city officials report that most small thefts are now tied to chemical dependency. Women suffer some of the harshest consequences.
In 2024, 586 women were killed in Amazônia Legal. Community leaders link a growing share of domestic violence and femicides to alcohol and drug abuse, as Indigenous territories double as smuggling corridors and storage sites for traffickers.
This is not a distant tragedy. The Amazon is a key gateway for South American cocaine heading to Brazil, Europe and beyond. Where the state is weak, armed factions act as de facto authorities.
At the center is óxi, a crude paste made from cocaine leftovers mixed with solvents. Smoked like crack but cheaper and faster-acting, it allows gangs to hook poor, young users; local officials say many addicts buy only this refuse.
Cartografias da Violência na Amazônia identifies at least 17 criminal factions across“Amazônia Legal.” Nearly half of the region's municipalities have faction presence, with the Comando Vermelho dominating much of this map.
The forest has become a logistics hub where rivers move cocaine and skunk toward Brazil 's big cities and foreign markets. Alto Solimões, with a majority Indigenous population and chronic poverty, shows how fragile communities pay the price.
Most locals depend on social-assistance programs and few hold formal jobs. In that vacuum, micro-trafficking offers quick“work,” and debts to gangs lock teenagers into the trade.
Amazon mini-cracolândias fuel addiction and violence
Researchers describe mini-cracolândias in Tikuna communities such as Umariaçu and Belém do Solimões, with adolescents gathering at night as music, drugs and alcohol circulate, and even women with small children present.
Families say they are losing teenagers first to addiction, then to petty crime, while police and city officials report that most small thefts are now tied to chemical dependency. Women suffer some of the harshest consequences.
In 2024, 586 women were killed in Amazônia Legal. Community leaders link a growing share of domestic violence and femicides to alcohol and drug abuse, as Indigenous territories double as smuggling corridors and storage sites for traffickers.
This is not a distant tragedy. The Amazon is a key gateway for South American cocaine heading to Brazil, Europe and beyond. Where the state is weak, armed factions act as de facto authorities.
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