Você não precisa dominar a língua de Obama e Lady Diana para entender este texto muito bem ilustrado.
Este artigo vai nos trazer um monte de turistas, bem mais que a Copa do Mundo pela qual sacrificamos escolas, hospitais, água e estradas!
Pode crer, broder!
Children who carry guns through Salvador's slums: Shocking images that show drug gangs' brutal grip on Brazil streets where hundreds of thousands will travel for next year's World Cup
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The largest city on Brazil's north-east coast, Salvador is a major tourist destination and the site of a 56,500-seat stadium being readied for next year's World Cup. It is also in the grip of an unprecedented wave of violence that has seen murder rates soar by more than 250 per cent.
The dense slums of the city, capital of Bahia state, are an impenetrable warren ruled by gangsters, who control the terrified and impoverished residents with intimidations, beatings and summary executions.
Express kidnappings, where individuals are abducted and forced to withdraw funds from automated teller machines to secure their release, are common, as are muggings, robberies, pickpocketing, bag snatching and drug dealing.
Brazilian drug gangs regularly recruit minors to carry out their dirty work, because they often get lesser sentences, meaning that the most innocent face can hide a deadly killer.
With just over 13 months until the start of the World Cup and an expected mass influx of football fans, police in Salvador face a battle to take control of their city. But in a force notorious for brutality and corruption, they face opposition not only from criminal gangs but also a sceptical populace.
These pictures show the brutal reality of life in the streets of Salvador's slums.
Taking no chances: Police search youths for weapons and drugs while on patrol in the Nordeste de Amaralina slum complex in Salvador, Bahia State
Whose streets? A Brazilian drug gang member nicknamed Firecracker, 22, poses with a gun atop a hill overlooking a Salvador slum
Armed and dangerous: A young gangster nicknamed Giant, 17, poses with a gun atop the same hill. Salvador, which is a major tourist destination and a host city for the 2014 World Cup, is in the grip of an unprecedented wave of violence that has seen murder rates soar by more than 250 per cent
Warriors: The city, capital of Bahia state, is the largest city on Brazil's north-east coast, is the site of a 56,500-seat stadium being readied for next year's World Cup
Summary killing: The body of a person identified by the police as a transvestite named Rodrigo, lies on the street where he was shot in Salvador's Alto do Cabrito slum
Grim work: Police forensic workers remove Rodrigo's body from the densely populated backs treets as residents look on. The dense slums of the city are an impenetrable warren ruled by gangsters, who control the terrified and impoverished residents with intimidations, beatings and summary executions.
So many tears: Ana Claudia, who witnessed her son Reinaldo being beaten and shot dead by drug traffickers, cries during an interview in the Fazendo Couto slum
Senseless murders: Residents stare at the body of a woman shot in the head in the Sao Cristovao slum
Unholy: The body of a woman is picked up by police forensic workers after being shot in the face on the night of Good Friday, in Salvador's Ondina neighbourhood
Armed to the teeth: A Brazilian drug dealer nicknamed Pilintra, 26, poses with with two pistols near his home in the Salvador slums
Still just a boy: Giant, 17, poses with his gun and his medallion of St George. Brazilian drug gangs regularly recruit minors, who often get lesser sentences
Life must go on: A policeman armed with an assault rifle patrols as a family crosses a street in the Nordeste de Amaralina slum complex
Starting young: A boy makes a double gun gesture as he plays on the street of the Nordeste de Amaralina slum complex as a policeman, back right, patrols the area
Behind enemy lines: Police officers patrol the narrow, winding alleys of the Nordeste de Amaralina slum complex in Salvador
Scars of war: Police patrol past the 'rifle wall' pockmarked by bullets from many shootouts between drug gangs and police in the Nordeste de Amaralina slum
Climate of fear: A policeman points his pistol through his car window at a passer-by as he patrols the Nordeste de Amaralina slum complex
Alert: Armed police react to a perceived threat as they prowl through the Nordeste de Amaralina slum in search of gangsters
Police special forces in training to operate against the Salvador drug gangs: With just over 13 months until the start of the World Cup and an expected mass influx of football fans, police in Salvador face a battle to re-take control of their city from the gangsters who rule its ghettoes
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? But in a force notorious for brutality and corruption, they face opposition not only from criminal gangs but also a sceptical populace
Military tactics: A huge show of force may be needed to protect World Cup visitors in a city where kidnappings, murders, muggings robberies, pickpocketing, bag snatching and drug dealing are commonplace
Under surveillance: A police officer watches live security cameras aimed at different points of the city where violence is common, at a command centre in Salvador
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