In news as shocking as it was unreported in the United States, the Brazilian press revealed earlier this week
that Academi—the rebranded private militia once known as Blackwater—has
been providing security training for the 2014 World Cup. The notorious
company, responsible for the 2011 Nisour Square massacre in Iraq, has been training Brazilian security forces in North Carolina.
Hosting mega-events comes with astronomical costs. This summer’s World Cup in Brazil is the most expensive ever,
with a tab so far of $11 billion to $13 billion. These costs promise
to catapult even higher as unfinished projects linger long after the
soccer fans have returned home, with some estimating the final price tag
to crest at $15 billion.
In addition to being the most expensive, the World Cup organizers plan
to deploy more force than any previous tournament. More than 170,000
security personnel from the military, police and secret service will be
on hand, 22 percent more than worked the previous World Cup in South Africa. Now we know that some of these forces will be trained by a private security firm with a dodgy history.
In
Rio, the “pacification” of favelas is already hurtling ahead full
throttle. Amnesty International described the Pacifying Police Unit’s
recent incursion into the Maré complex of favelas as “a military occupation.” The suspicious disappearance of a young man named Amarildo Dias de Souza
from his home favela of Rocinha sparked a public outburst and media-led
investigation that spurred criminal charges against the neighborhood’s
commanding officer and his minions. The security officials sit in
prison awaiting trial, accused of torturing De Souza to death and
discarding his corpse in the jungle. Not surprisingly, a recent
national poll found that less than a quarter of Brazilians trust the
police.
The
conflation of terrorism and activism is also rampant. Lawmakers in
Brazil are angling to use the state of exception that sports
mega-events inevitably bring to pass drastic legislation. The Brazilian
Congress is contemplating an antiterrorism bill
that would impose hefty sentences—fifteen to thirty years in prison—for
“causing or inciting widespread terror by threatening or trying to
threaten the life, the physical integrity or the health or liberty of a
person.” Human-rights groups have clamored that such proposals are
overly broad and could be used to squelch all kinds of protest and
actions during the World Cup.
For
security mavens, Academi’s involvement training Brazilians at its
company headquarters in North Carolina may come as no great surprise.
After all, Wikileaks revealed
in a 2009 cable from the US Embassy in Brasilia that the US government
views the crises brought on by hosting sports mega-events as prime
occasions to cash in.
After
power outages rippled across Brazil in 2009, the US Mission wrote,
“The newly heightened concerns about Brazil’s infrastructure as a
result of this blackout, combined with the need to address
infrastructure challenges in the run-up to the 2014 World Cup and 2016
Olympics, present the United States opportunities for engagement on
infrastructure development as well critical infrastructure protection
and possibly cyber security.” In short, Brazil’s misery created room for
opportunism.
The
cable encouraged US government agencies like the Department of Defense
and Department of Homeland Security “to explore these opportunities in
the near-term.” With Academi’s involvement in Brazil, this type of
“opportunity” is taking shape.
The indomitable critic Eduardo Galeano recently said of FIFA,
the world’s governing body for football, “There are visible and
invisible dictators. The power structure of world football is
monarchical. It’s the most secret kingdom in the world.” People across
Brazil concur—disgruntlement with Fifa’s arrogance and opacity is
widespread. Earlier this month, a poll found, quite remarkably, that in
the football-crazy country of Brazil only 48 percent of the population
favors hosting this summer’s World Cup, plummeting from 78 percent
support in 2008. Meanwhile, 41 percent actively oppose it, up from only
10 percent. Last summer, the 2013 Confederations Cup provided a
prime-time dress rehearsal for principled dissent. Almost everyone
expects cross-country protests at this summer’s Copa do Mundo.
Under intense public pressure, Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes recently remarked,
“We’re not going to build a Bird’s Nest [Stadium] in Rio de Janeiro.
If you go to Beijing today, the Bird’s Nest has become a mausoleum to
honor wasted public money. We are not going to do this here.” The mayor
was right about the perils of white elephants. But another threat
lingers: the intensified militarization of public space in the name of
protecting the sports spectacle. Now it looks like private security
firms like Academi are in on the deal, and that’s unsettling for anyone
not under the spell of historical amnesia.
from here
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