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Brazil's Disappearing Favelas
In Chile, it was called the The Brick. It was the many-thousand page economic manifesto of Dictator Augusto Pinochet, written by "the Chicago Boys" - Chilean exchange students from the University of Chicago. Disciples of the university's conservative, neoliberal economics professor Milton Friedman, they printed The Brick on "the other 9/11" - September 11th, 1973. As Chile's Presidential palace was being bombed, "Companero Presidente" Salvador Allende was being murdered, and General Pinochet was assuming power, The Brick became Pinochet's economic compass. It guided the country through two decades of slash and burn privatisation, displacement, and inequality - all in the name of "development".
Favelas, slums that surround cities in Brazil, are being cleared to make room for sports accommodation. (Gallo/Getty)
Today Pinochet is reviled and gone, but The Brick has become a default manifesto for much of the globe. Today, it's most ardent sponsors ironically bear its name as an acronym: BRIC. They are Brazil, Russia, India, and China. These ambitious nations have established themselves as the future, not only of global economic growth, but as future centres of international sport. They can offer two things that the decaying, Western powers can no longer provide: massive deficit spending and a state police infrastructure to displace, destroy, or disappear anyone who dares stand in their way.
We are seeing this in particularly dramatic form in Brazil. The country will be hosting both the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Summer Olympics. In the 21st century, these sporting events require more than stadiums and hotels. The host country must provide a massive security apparatus, a willingness to crush civil liberties, and the will to create the kind of "infrastructure" these games demand. That means not just stadiums, but sparkling new stadiums. That means not just security, but the latest in anti-terrorist technology. That means not just new transportation to and from venues, but hiding unsightly poverty from those travelling to and from the games. That means a willingness to spend billions of dollars in the name of creating a playground for international tourism and multi-national sponsors.
Every day in the favelas, the slums that surround Brazil's major cities, these international athletic festivals are vividly recalling the ways of The Brick. Amnesty International, the United Nations, and even the International Olympic Committee - fearful of the damage to their "brand", are raising concerns. It's understandable why.
This week came a series of troubling tales of the bulldozing and cleansing of the favelas, all in the name of "making Brazil ready for the Games". Hundreds of families from Favela de Metro find themselves living on rubble with nowhere to go after a pitiless housing demolition by Brazilian authorities. By bulldozing homes before families had the chance to find new housing or be "relocated", the government is in flagrant violation of the most basic concepts of human rights.
As the Guardian reported, "Redbrick shacks have been cracked open by earth-diggers. Streets are covered in a thick carpet of rubble, litter and twisted metal. By night, crack addicts squat in abandoned shacks, filling sitting rooms with empty bottles, filthy mattresses and crack pipes improvised from plastic cups. The stench of human excrement hangs in the air."
One favela resident, Eduardo Freitas said, "it looks like you are in Iraq or Libya. I don't have any neighbours left. It's a ghost town".
Freitas doesn't need a masters from the University of Chicago to understand what is happening. "The World Cup is on its way and they want this area. I think it is inhumane," he said.
The Rio housing authority says that this is all in the name of "development" and by refurbishing the area, they are offering the favela dwellers, "dignity".
Maybe something was lost in the translation. Or perhaps a bureaucrat's conception of "dignity" is becoming homeless so your neighbourhood can became a parking lot for wealthy soccer fans. And there is more "dignity" on the way. According to Julio Cesar Condaque, an activist opposing the levelling of the favelas, "between now and the 2014 World Cup, 1.5million families will be removed from their homes across the whole of Brazil."
I spoke with Christopher Gaffney, Visiting Professor at Universidade Federal Fluminense in Rio de Janeiro and Vice-President of the Associacao Nacional dos Torcedores [National Fans' Association].
"It's like a freefall into a neo-liberal paradise," he said."We are living in cities planned by PR firms and brought into existence by an authoritarian state in conjunction with their corporate partners. These events are giant Trojan horses that leave us shocked and awed by their ability to transform places and people while instilling parallel governments that use public money to generate private profits. Similar to a military invasion, the only way to successfully occupy the country with a mega-event is to bombard people with information, get rid of the undesirables, and launch a media campaign that turns alternative voices into anti-patriotic naysayers who hate sport and 'progress'."
It's a remarkable journey. Pinochet is now a grotesque memory, universally disgraced in death. But The Brick remains, a millstone around the neck of Latin America. Expect a series of protests in Rio as the games approach. And expect them to be dealt with in a way that speaks to the darkest political traditions of the region.


10 Comments so far
Show AllDilma, say it ain't so!
She needs to build good housing for them, raze the slums, redistribute wealth and send Planned Parenthood
*If she is using the same land where the Favelas are for building decent public housing, she needs to relocate the people in decent temporary housing. Maybe we can send them used Katrina trailers.
And, of course, Zirin the sportswriter will be there to document all of the athletic events. You're doing a heckuva job, Davey.
I don't get it, are you being sarcastic? Zirin is one of the best progressive writers out there. Sportswriting is just the medium he uses to disseminate progressive views, really. He's a progressive first.
And if you were being sarcastic, it would be all the more ridiculous for the fact that Zirin is well-known for boycotting sports events and sports teams who are associated with conservative/reactionary politics: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Zirin. So, he most certainly isn't one to put his principles aside just to cover a sporting event.
Sorry if I misread you and you weren't being sarcastic at all.
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As for the article, I thought it was pretty great, thanks Zirin for writing it and CD for carrying it. It's pretty disgusting how they are repeating the exact same thing that was done in Beijing before the Olympics: pushing out the poor from their homes to make a playground for international tourists in the name of "national prestige". If I recall correctly, some Beijing residents actually committed suicide in protest over losing their homes. There was a good chapter about the pre-Olympics sanitation of Beijing in the book Evil Paradises: Dreamworlds of Neoliberalism by Mike Davis.
dkshaw -- What exactly is the point of your comment? That Zirin is responsible for the carnage because he writes about sports?
He is one of those rare journalists who actually analyzes sports while placing them in their political & economic context. He actually discusses issues such as capitalism, class, exploitation AND sports in an intelligent manner.
He is the one bringing you this information on what is unfolding in Brazil -- he has enlightened you -- and your thanks to him is to make snide dismissive comments. As if even trying to write about sports in a socially responsible way is only worthy of your contempt.
And while Zirin, the lowly "sportswriter", is attempting to alert us to these injustices & horrors, you are doing precisely what for the poor of Brazil?
I mean other than belittling the messenger?
The communities - are struggling to sustain themselves in the harshest of conditions- working and studying hard to deepen sophistication in dealing with the complex dynamics.
In the lead up to the olympics you can subscribe to a newsletter and help raise awareness
http://rioonwatch.org/?utm_content=megkidd%40webryders.net&utm_source=VerticalResponse&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=RioOnWatch&utm_campaign=Inaugural%20Digest%20is%20Here!content
They used police state tactics to clear the streets in Vancouver before the Olympics and make it look all shiny for the uber-rich tourists. The Olympics have become a scourge on every city that hosts them. It's almost like a sports shock doctrine.
"It's almost like a sports shock doctrine."
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That's exactly what it is!
Good catch.
Favelas in the bigger cities in Brazil typically have been "off limits" to the police, controlled by "criminal elements" of drug gangs. These two world-wide athletic events--the world cup and the olympics--are excuses to clean out the falvelas, which has been a desire of Brazilian governments for decades. Of course, the displaced residents will end up somewhere, producing unpredictable situations of one sort or another.