Research and Markets: Brazil Defence and Security Report for Q4 2011 - Government Actively Improving Security in Favelas Before the World Cup & Olympic Games

DUBLIN--()--Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/a1a0d4/brazil_defence_and) has announced the addition of the "Brazil Defence and Security Report Q4 2011" report to their offering.

Business Monitor International's Brazil Defence and Security Report provides industry professionals and strategists with independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on Brazil's defence and security industry.

Most of the newsflow pertaining to defence and security issues in Brazil through mid-2011 have confirmed that the various major trends remain intact.

FIFA World Cup & Olympic Games

In advance of the 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, the government is actively working to improve security in the favelas in that city which, according to the municipal government, are home to 1mn out of Rio's population of 6mn. Headlines in the mainstream media highlight that the authorities are using three measures to end the control of the favelas by rival drug gangs. Police and troops have undertaken military-style occupations of favelas, in some instances, with blood being shed.

More generally, though, the police continue the policy of using a permanent presence in the favelas, through Police Pacification Units (or UPPs, to give them their Portuguese acronym): these are police stations actually constructed in the shantytowns. A more interesting development is the construction in Rio's Complexo de Alamo favela of a cable car network that gives residents much greater access to the city's public transport system and jobs.

Strategic Border Plan

Meanwhile, on June 8 President Dilma Rousseff announced a new Strategic Border Plan', which will be overseen by Vice-President Michael Temer. In practice, this initiative does not appear to add anything to three existing programmes to deter smuggling and, in general, to secure Brazil's frontiers (and, in particular, those with Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Bolivia and Paraguay). In accordance with the National Defence Strategy (NDS) that was drafted in late 2008, the government was committed to a dramatic increase in the number of troops in the Special Border Platoons of the Amazon Military Command (and, given the heightened need to defend the country's massive offshore energy resources, the navy).

Press reports at the beginning of 2011, citing defence minister Nelson Jobim, indicated that the new Integrated System for Border Surveillance (Sisfron), which will come into operation over the next eight years or so, will include radar coverage along the length of Brazil's frontiers.

Modernising Equipment

The NDS also envisages the expenditure of huge amounts of money on the purchase of new materiel and the modernisation of existing equipment. Over the long-term, procurement expenditure should amount to around US$128bn. Brazil is an excellent example of a large but, previously, relatively poor country whose government is sensibly taking advantage of a resources-led boom to undertake a radical reform of the armed forces.

In the short-term, though, the government has cut BRL4,000mn (US$2,400mn) from the BRL 15,170mn (US$9,100mn) procurement budget for 2011: this is a part of a general policy which involves a brutal reduction in government spending in order to reduce inflationary pressures. When procurement resumes in 2012, it is likely that attention will return to the FX Fighter Replacement Program - the large scale purchase of jets for the air force. Reports indicate that the cost of the planes themselves could easily exceed US$6bn. There will also be substantial maintenance contracts. The Program remains, essentially, a three-way race between Boeing's F-18, Dassault's Rafale and the Saab Gripen.

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Contacts

Research and Markets
Laura Wood, Senior Manager,
press@researchandmarkets.com
U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907
Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716

Contacts

Research and Markets
Laura Wood, Senior Manager,
press@researchandmarkets.com
U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907
Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716