|
WOMEN IN BRAZIL TAKE A STAND AGAINST
GUNS
February 2003 (Amnesty International - The
Wire) In the last 10 years, 300,000 people have been killed in Brazil,
largely as a result of urban violence and the proliferation of guns
in the country. While 24 men are killed for every one woman, every
death leaves a grieving mother, wife, sister, girlfriend or friend.
Now the women of Brazil are uniting to try to put an end to the
terrifying escalation of violence and gun crime.
On Mother's Day, 13 May 2001, the Brazilian non-governmental organization
(NGO) Viva Rio launched a campaign under the slogan "Arma Não!
Ela Ou Eu." ("Choose gun-free! It's your weapon or me.").
Their aim was to bring together women from all sections of Brazilian
society to force the men of Brazil to give up their guns. At the
launch, attended by actresses, journalists, artists, mothers who
had lost their children and wives who had lost their husbands, white
flowers were distributed together with pamphlets explaining that
owning a gun does not guarantee the protection of your family, but
rather puts them at greater risk.
Urban violence in Brazil is endemic, and there is no doubt that
Brazilian society lives in fear. Those living in poor urban communities
are trapped in a no-man's land between the violence of criminal
gangs, who commit serious crimes including torture and killings,
and that of the state response to them. The police forces are underfunded,
poorly equipped and trained, and resort to brutal, ad hoc solutions
and human rights violations in the absence of a coherent approach
to public security issues. AI has begun researching the links between
urban violence and human rights violations and in December last
year, a representative of Viva Rio, an important partner for AI,
visited AI's International Secretariat to talk about their campaigns
against this spiralling violence, especially those involving women.
Viva Rio, one of Brazil's largest NGOs, was created in 1993 in response
to two appalling massacres of unarmed civilians by military policemen.
Seven street children and one young adult were killed at the Candelária
Church, Rio de Janeiro, in July, and a month later, 21 people were
shot dead by a group of hooded gunmen who spent two hours shooting
indiscriminately at residents in the Vigário Geral shanty
town. AI has campaigned and lobbied about these massacres ever since,
with some success.
Viva Rio is working with the poorest communities of Rio de Janeiro
to find practical local solutions to the problems of gun crime.
Initiatives include working with the local police to set up a system
for storing and recording guns that are seized, with the aim of
tracing the source of the guns and ensuring that they are not reintroduced
into the community, and pilot projects of community policing. In
these projects the police and community representatives agreed on
three key points: not to involve children with guns; not to have
guns or drugs in the open; and to put an end to police corruption.
In the first such initiative the chief police officer sacked over
half his staff because of bribery and corruption. This initiated
the long and complex process of building police credibility in the
community.
In June 2001, Viva Rio, the International Action Network on Small
Arms and other local NGOs collaborated with the state government
of Rio de Janeiro and the military to destroy 100,000 weapons which
had been seized by the police. The weapons were heaped into a 400-square-metre
pile and bulldozed in front of a crowd of tens of thousands. The
event took the record for the largest weapons stockpile to be destroyed
anywhere in the world on a single day. A further 10,000 weapons
were destroyed on 9 July 2002 and Viva Rio has campaigned to have
9 July made Small Arms Destruction Day throughout the world.
From: http://web.amnesty.org/web/wire.nsf/February2003/Brazil
|