From: "Macdonald Stainsby" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 12:49:49 -0700
To: "Rad Green" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Leninist International" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [L-I] New Brazilian Party?

September 9, 2001

Brazil Is Getting a New Political Party: Its Base Is in State Prison
By LARRY ROHTER

�O PAULO, Brazil - Having demonstrated its dominance of the prison system
during
a mass uprising, Brazil's most notorious criminal group is now looking to
extend
its influence by organizing a political party. Naturally, its platform calls
for
penal reform.

The group, the First City Command, known by its initials in Portuguese,
P.C.C.,
has already designated its first candidate for Congress in next year's
national
elections.

He is Anselmo Neves Maia, a lawyer here who represents leaders of the
organization. He says the group also plans to endorse candidates in other
states
who sympathize with the party platform.

"Prisoners all over the country are mobilized behind this cause," he said,
"and
I am already getting calls from them asking me who their families should
support
and vote for."

He added, "I am the candidate not just of the P.C.C., which has had the
courage
to rebel against the injustices practiced in the system, but of all the
thousands of prisoners in Brazil's prisons."

The new political organization is to be called the Party of the Incarcerated
Community, whose initials would also be P.C.C. Its secretary general is
J�lio
C�sar Silv�rio, who is serving six years for robbery and was described by
Mr.
Maia as "dynamic and enlightened, an admirer of your Benjamin Franklin." But
the
director of prisons for the state of S�o Paulo, Nagashi Furukawa, has
characterized the First City Command as a crime syndicate that controls the
trafficking of drugs, alcohol, weapons and mobile telephones within the
state
prison system.

The authorities say the group also runs a flourishing "escape industry" that
has
resulted in the flight of more than 1,000 prisoners since 1998 and further
enriched the group's coffers.

S�o Paulo, with more than 36 million of Brazil's 170 million people, is
Brazil's
most populous state. Nearly 100,000 people, or just under half of the
national
total, are being held in the state's jails and prisons. The national
government
does not operate prisons.

In February the First City Command organized the largest prison rebellion in
the
nation's history. Using cell phones smuggled into their cells, the group's
leaders ordered their followers in 29 prisons around the state to take
control
of cellblocks and hold thousands of hostages. The uprising was meant to stop
the
authorities' actions to weaken the gang.

The two-day uprising left 19 people dead, most of them members of three
rival
groups competing with the First City Command for control of S�o Paulo's
prisons.
Since then, officials have tried to weaken the gang by moving its leaders to
prisons outside S�o Paulo, but some other states have balked, arguing that
the
crime group could simply spread.

During the rebellion the group described itself as a prisoners' union and
hung
banners calling for "peace, justice and freedom" from cell windows and
roofs. In
August it published a political manifesto condemning a political system that
in
Mr. Maia's words "offers the benefits of the law for the rich and its rigors
for
the poor."

The local press has quickly christened Mr. Maia "the candidate of organized
crime," but he says he does not mind the association with the First City
Command, which he likens to "a club or a guild."

He is so confident of victory in the October 2002 election, in fact, that he
boasts that he has no plans to campaign or to spend money on posters, fliers
or
bumper stickers. "I figure that every prisoner has at least three people in
his
family who are voters," he said.



-------------------------------------------
Macdonald Stainsby
Rad-Green List: Radical anti-capitalist environmental discussion.
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/rad-green
----
Leninist-International: Building bridges in the tradition of V.I. Lenin.
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international
----
In the contradiction lies the hope.
                                     --Bertholt Brecht


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