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Cash-strapped Rio state says Olympics will be fine. The problem is what happens after

The state government is running on a deficit of around $6bn a year, and officials admit that any bailouts are merely 'palliative measures'

Dom Philips
Rio de Janeiro
Tuesday 12 July 2016 18:05 BST
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Students have been protesting over the amount of money spent on the Rio Olympics, which they think could have been better spent on education
Students have been protesting over the amount of money spent on the Rio Olympics, which they think could have been better spent on education (AP)

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The state of Rio is so broke it is selling off the governor’s summer residence and the small island it sits on. But because of a recent federal government bailout, officials insist, the Summer Olympics will go just fine.

The problem is what happens after the Games.

“One isolated measure does not resolve the problems of the state,” said Leonardo Espíndola, the governor’s chief of staff. “The crisis affects all sectors.”

The state government’s dire financial situation has clouded preparations for South America’s first Olympic Games, which begin on 5 August. It is running a deficit of about $6bn (£4.5bn) a year, Espíndola said in an interview last week, and has lurched from one crisis to another since last year, when state hospitals ran out of basic supplies.

Struggling to pay salaries and pensions and keep public entities operating, officials resorted to apocalyptic rhetoric to force money out of the central government and avert an Olympics disaster.

In April, Espíndola warned of imminent “social collapse”. In June, acting governor Francisco Dornelles, sitting in for Gov Luiz de Souza, who is undergoing cancer treatment, declared a “state of public calamity in financial administration”. Espíndola said Dornelles’s move was decisive in freeing up $870m from the federal government that, coupled with austerity measures, stabilized the situation.

Now, officials say, everything is in place for Rio to stage a memorable Olympics – although many observers doubt even that. Most of the federal bailout was used to cover security costs and pay outstanding salaries to police, firefighters and prison officers. Less than a month before the Games begin, some emergency health centers have reduced their hours and are struggling to pay suppliers. Teachers are on strike. Police and firefighters have twice staged demonstrations at Rio’s international airport, warning that visitors’ safety cannot be guaranteed and protesting still-unpaid salaries.

Rio 2016: Protests cloud Olympic Games build-up

Residents in some areas have donated toilet paper, cleaning products and even fuel to police stations low on supplies, said Ferdando Bandeira, director of a union of investigating officers. “The conditions are a little precarious,” he said.

A recently retired police sergeant, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issues facing the state, said the Olympics would not be safe for visitors despite the deployment of 85,000 soldiers and police.

Instead, he said, local commanders may choose to deal with the leaders of the armed drug gangs that control many of the low-income communities, called favelas, where much crime is concentrated. If drug lords bring down the number of robberies in the area, he said, police leave the drug trade alone.

“This happens,” he said. “It’s practice.”

Meanwhile, some Rio residents are already using a new cellphone app launched by Brazil’s Amnesty International branch to avoid places where gunfights have happened. It is called Fogo Cruzado, Portuguese for crossfire.

The concern, however, is that even if the Games proceed smoothly, disaster has been merely postponed. Another police sergeant, also speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to give interviews, characterised the bailout as a short-term fix at best, and one aimed at security personnel.

“This was for us to work during the Olympics, to shut us up,” he said. “We don’t know what will happen afterward.”

Espíndola acknowledged as much, saying that cuts and government bailouts were “palliative measures” and that bigger structural changes are needed, including amending laws to allow the state to reduce its crushing pension burden.

Brazil’s generous pension laws allow all public servants to retire as young as 50, burdening many states already facing financial difficulties. Rio has more retired staff than workers, Espíndola said, and their costs represent more than half of its deficit. But Rio is worse off than most, according to José Afonso, a researcher with the Getulio Vargas Foundation’s Brazilian Institute of Economics, because it also depends heavily on tax revenue from oil production — and oil prices have plummeted.

A gargantuan corruption crisis at the state-run oil company Petrobras, headquartered here, also has reduced the construction of oil platforms and rigs and hit supplier companies in Rio, with a knock-on effect for the state.

Rio’s oil revenue has fallen from a fifth of its income to 10 per cent in two years, Afonso said.

The state also has been hit by the recession that is affecting the country as a whole, its worst in decades. Brazil’s interim president Michel Temer made austerity measures his main platform after taking over from Dilma Rousseff, who is currently suspended from office pending a controversial impeachment trial.

“The scenario is bleak for the coming years,” Afonso said.

For visitors and athletes who stay within the main Olympic areas, Rio’s crisis may become visible only if they get sick or fall victim to crime.

The state’s emergency health centres have seen budgets almost halved, said Rubem Fernandes, director of a non-profit group called Viva Rio, which manages six of them.

“We reduced the number of doctors, nurses, assistants,” Fernandes said. “But we have more queues.”

However, the federal government has contracted 2,500 extra medical professionals for the Rio Games, based in six federal hospitals. Two state hospitals were taken over by the city government, which is responsible for most Olympic venues and is in much better financial shape.

Some critics say corruption factors into Rio’s financial mess. A key collaborator in the Petrobras scandal has accused both former Rio governor Sergio Cabral and his former deputy and successor, the ailing de Souza, of bribery worth millions of dollars around contracts for an oil refinery.

Other collaborators have reportedly said that Cabral, who ran Rio until 2014, was paid bribes on contracts for Rio’s new $2.7bn metro line. Both men have denied the allegations.

Some $90m of the recent federal bailout went toward partially finishing the line, financed with French and Brazilian government loans and slated to open with limited service just four days before the Games. Some transport experts said this leaves little time for tests with passengers. Rio’s bid document promised the line for 2014.

Construction “should have been completed,” said Paulo Ribeiro, a transport engineering professor at the Federal University of Rio. “As it wasn’t, I hope it is secure.”

Alexandre Rojas, a professor in transport engineering at the State University of Rio, said normally tests would last two or three months. But he said the line would meet international safety standards.

Rio’s transport secretariat said the line will be operated manually during the Games and accessible only to passengers with Olympic credentials and event tickets. It will close during the Paralympics that follow and begin an automatically operated service in late September for four hours a day.

The situation around the metro line is a sign of how, away from its gleaming new venues, Rio might scrape through the Olympics, separating visitors from its poorer inhabitants.

Another such sign came on 4 July, when Mayor Eduardo Paes inaugurated the city’s third bus rapid transit, or BRT, line linking Games areas to the rest of the city. It connects Barra de Tijuca, a neighborhood in Rio’s west, to a second Olympic hub in Deodoro, in the city’s gritty “West Zone,” passing favelas and low-income neighborhoods.

“This changes people’s lives,” said Paes. He said the state’s financial crisis and security concerns were “not a problem”.

Like the new metro line, this BRT will be available during the Games only to those with Olympic credentials and tickets. For the rest of the population, access to both will come afterward, just as the post-Olympic hangover is kicking in — provided the state can come up with the funds to finish work on the much-needed train line.

© Washington Post

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