Lakhota
Diamond Member
By NICHOLAS NEHAMAS AND JOSE LUIZ BRUFATTO DE OLIVEIRA
Brazil's battle against gun murders has implications for America's inner cities.
A man walks into an elementary school with two handguns. Within minutes, more than thirty children are dead or wounded.
This isn’t Newtown, Connecticut, but Realengo, a neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. On April 7th, 2011, Wellington Oliveira murdered twelve children and wounded twenty others. The tragedy sparked a national conversation on gun violence, a huge problem in Brazil.
On Wednesday, in reaction to a different massacre, President Obama proposed a series of gun control measures he says will reduce gun deaths in America. Whether a recalcitrant Congress and vocal gun lobby will let those proposals become law is unclear.
Fact number 1: Brazil has the most gun murders in the world (around 36,000 people in 2010), but the U.S. has the most among industrialized nations (9,146).
Fact number 2: in 2011 Brazil was the number one importer of guns into the U.S.
Brazil: a case worth studying
“More people are killed every year in Brazil through intentional violence than anywhere else on the planet, including most of the world’s war zones combined,” says Robert Muggah, research director of the Igarapé Institute, a think-tank in Rio that studies the interaction between violence and the drug trade.
The great majority of these deaths, Muggah explains, are “concentrated amongst relatively poor to very poor, lower-class, often black or minority-type groups in densely populated, under-serviced areas known as favelas.”
In the U.S., we call them ghettos.
Despite the media spotlight drawn by tragedies like Newtown and Aurora, ghettos are where most of America’s gun violence takes place. America’s rate of gun murders is 3.3 per 100,000 people, the highest in the developed world. Brazil, whose worst favelas Muggah compares to conditions in Somalia or the Congo, has a much higher rate of 18.1.
The irony? Brazil actually has much stronger gun control laws than the U.S.
If the system is broke, fix it
Brazil’s strict stance on guns comes from a long and painful history of urban violence.
Until the 1980′s Brazil and the U.S. had comparable homicide rates. Then crack cocaine invaded Brazil’s cities, setting off a fatal ripple effect. Criminals sold the drug and used their profits to buy guns. Gang warfare erupted, with police sometimes fighting the drug lords and sometimes helping them. The rich moved into gated communities surrounded by barbed wire and purchased private arsenals for protection. By the mid-to-late 1990′s, Muggah says, “Rio had become almost uninhabitable, Recife was in flames, Sao Paolo had entered full-scale crisis mode.”
A gun control movement was born and in 2003 the government passed a law called the Disarmament Statue which, among other restrictions, limited who could buy and sell guns, and prevented civilians from carrying them in public. The new law built on previous regulations that mandated background checks and registration of weapons. Gun sales dropped, and firearm deaths fell from nearly 40,000 in 2003 to a little over 34,000 in 2004.
But Muggah says a lack of cooperation between state and federal police and corruption in the gun trade have hindered Brazil’s efforts to keep its estimated 20 million legal and illegal guns out of the hands of criminals.
Weapons exported to Paraguay and Colombia by Brazil’s powerful gun industry are smuggled back into the country. Others are stolen by criminals or sold to them by crooked Brazilian soldiers, cops and firefighters (yes, firefighters carry guns in Brazil).
A growing firearm industry
No country sold more guns to the U.S. in 2011 than Brazil — 846,000, or approximately 26 percent of all imports that year. And the Brazilian companies are thinking of producing inside the U.S. too. The New York Times reported that Forja Taurus, a Brazilian manufacturing conglomerate, was interested in buying the U.S. company that makes the AR-15 rifle used in the Newtown shooting.
Naturally, the NRA has taken an interest in gun control in Brazil. According to gun control activists, the NRA was instrumental in helping Brazil’s gun lobby defeat a 2005 referendum that would have banned civilians from purchasing arms and ammunition.
Robert Muggah argues that Brazil’s experience can help the U.S. understand how to stop criminals from getting guns.
For one, Muggah argues that the problems of favelas are not uncommon in the U.S., even if their scale is much greater.
“If you were to look at Detroit or Chicago or DC [instead of Rio or Sao Paulo or Recife],” he says, “you’d see high socio-economic disparity, rapid rates of poorly regulated urbanization, the introduction, retail and consumption of drugs, police brutality. All these things create a cocktail of violent outcomes.”
More: What the U.S. can learn from Brazil's epidemic of gun violence - Latitude News