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The boys from Brazil who rule Rio’s ‘Corner of Fear’ gun-toting kids of brazils slums

A boy steps boldly into the night traffic and waves a gun to bring the cars to
a halt, clearing a path for a motorcycle which screeches into the
intersection. Riding pillion is another boy, brandishing a machinegun.

Later two teenagers, also riding pillion on motorbikes, flash their guns at
other motorists; nearby, a boy can be seen taking aim with a rifle equipped
with a telescopic sight. Other youths wander the street smoking crack.

For residents, the junction between the busy Dom Helder Câmara and dos

Democráticos, in North Rio de Janeiro, has become known as the Corner of Fear — and video footage of daily life there has shocked a nation already
familiar with guns and violence.

PHOTOS:Youths flaunt guns on the streets of Rio de Janeiro

The latest images, captured by undercover journalists from the Rio tabloid Extra, have exposed the city’s criminal youth culture in a manner that echoes the
journalistic investigation featured in the film City of God.

The age of the criminals — one pistol-toting boy is 12 — is obvious cause for
alarm, but so is the seeming impunity with which they act.

The video footage has provided a glimpse into the city’s underworld that hardly touches Rio’s wealthier citizens.

Local newspapers rarely show at first hand the violence that permeates the
city’s slums (favelas). Since the brutal torture and murder of the
journalist Tim Lopes — who was caught filming secretly in the Vila Cruzeiro
favela in 2002 — Brazilian reporters have been reluctant to take their
cameras into slum areas. Any reports that are filed tend to come from
correspondents talking from inside armoured cars, or are images showing the
aftermath of a shooting.

“What is shocking is this parallel power, the fact that they are very young,”
said André Cabral De Almeida Cardoso, 41, a teacher. “They are so brazen
about it.”

Valera dos Santos, 34, a maid who lives in a favela in São Paulo, said: “My
God, I’ve never seen pictures like this. It’s absurd, they’re just boys.”

The journalists who captured the images were also taken aback. “Even knowing
the reality of what could happen, you are still shocked by the glamour that
these weapons represent in the arms of minors,” said Fernando Torres, 27,
one of a team of three who spent four nights undercover at the Corner of
Fear.

“These images are desolate,” said Lucy Petroucic, 56, a translator. “These
boys have become little Taleban who think they have nothing to lose.”

Within hours, police arrested one of a group of bandits shown in the video and
promised that changes were on the way. Luiz Fernando Pezão, Rio’s Deputy
Governor, told reporters that a new police base would open nearby in May.