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Opinion
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News Analysis
Less than a month before the start of the Rio carnival the city’s best-known samba school has been thrown into crisis following scandals involving secret passageways, armed drug traffickers and one of Latin America’s biggest drug kingpins. Founded in 1928 by a now-legendary group of samba composers, Mangueira is one of the great symbols of Brazilian music. Each year the school attracts thousands of followers, including tourists and celebrities, to its annual carnival processions. This year, however, its preparations have been disrupted by a police investigation into its relationship with Brazilian drug traffickers, who control the neighbourhood where Mangueira is located. “We are seeing, with increasing clarity, the growing proximity of drug traffickers with the samba schools,” police chief Gilberto Ribeiro told Brazilian TV recently. The scandals began last year when the federal police seized an amateur video containing images of the school’s then president, Percival Pires, at the wedding reception of Brazil’s most notorious drug lord, Luiz Fernando da Costa. Better known by his nickname Fernandinho Beira-Mar or Seaside Freddy, Da Costa is currently serving a sentence in a high security prison. In 2001 he was seized in a remote part of the Colombian jungle by the country’s army and accused of negotiating arms sales with the Revolutionary Forces of Colombia. The video featured a group of Mangueira musicians playing at the wedding party. The school’s president was caught on camera telling the drug trafficker’s wife: “Today is a happy day for the entire Mangueira nation.” “The police are worried,” Marcio Caldas, the police officer heading the investigation, told The Guardian. “The symbol of a [samba] school is its president, and when he goes to the party of a mega-trafficker it reveals that there is a certain intimacy.” He added that such links could lead to the samba school being used to “launder money or legitimise criminal activities.” Soon after the video became public further allegations appeared in the Brazilian press, claiming that the samba school’s HQ, located at the foot of the sprawling shantytown from which it takes its name, contained a secret passageway that was possibly used by the local drug gang to escape from the police. The controversy grew when it emerged that one of the composers of Mangueira’s 2008 samba theme-tune was wanted on drug trafficking charges. Francisco Monteiro, known by his nickname Tuchinha, was released last year after 17 years in prison. Police claim that he has returned to his position as leader of the local branch of the Red Command, the drug faction that patrols Mangueira’s streets with assault rifles. This month nearly 300 police poured into the shantytown in an attempt to capture the trafficker-turned-composer, who writes songs under the pseudonym Francisco do Pagode. Mangueira’s new administration has distanced itself from the drug gangs. — ©Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2008
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