
Sao Paulo moves to end area known as Crackland as residents scatter and cry foul against police
'I felt this strange peace,' said the 42-year-old Sao Paulo resident. 'Everyone had disappeared. But how come?'
Colaiácovo's bar-museum is located in one of the edges of Cracolandia, or Crackland, a sprawling downtown Sao Paulo area that for decades has been home to thousands of drug users, often lying on the ground or jaywalking with pipes between their lips.
But by May 12 the scene had changed.
Only police officers were seen where crack users dominated for decades. Shop owners and residents who worried about muggings were chatting outside. Pavement that until recently featured scattered shoes, single socks, broken pipes and, sometimes, feces seemed spotless. The makeshift shelters, made of cardboard and fabric, were gone, and some of the graffiti on deteriorated buildings of Crackland, once a backdrop to the human drama, can finally be seen.
The transformation that stationed police officers in the area and scared residents into other parts of the city is the result of an aggressive local government initiative to change the region for good.
Experts caution, however, that the cleanup carried significant costs: police brutality, the spread of security risks to other areas and the neglect of treatment and protection to drug users, who are not criminals. Instead, they say, Crackland residents have only scattered and will inevitably return.
'We can't even carry a blanket'
Residents told The Associated Press that police aggression has escalated since earlier this year under Gov. Tarcisio de Freitas and Mayor Ricardo Nunes. They say officers more frequently are using batons, preventing them from carrying bags where drugs could be hidden, closing several local pensions and even threatening to kill them. About a fourth of neighboring slum, where drug traffickers are reportedly based, has been removed.
Nearly two weeks after drug users vanished from the main Crackland area, hundreds have been spotted in smaller pockets around Sao Paulo's old city center. Social media videos show some attempting to return at night to their former drug use spot, now a 24/7 police-protected area. But all attempts have failed.
Many hope to soon return to the area they occupied for decades — provided police brutality wanes and authorities lose their grip of the region, as has happened in the past.
'My guitar is in the mud because of a criminal wearing blue," said Rogério, a tearful man in a dirty shirt and yoga pants, who didn't provide his surname due to fear of retribution. "I have nothing against the law. But the law has to understand we live there. Now we have to roam, it's horrible. We can't enter where we lived, we can't even carry a blanket.'
'It's about people'
Crackland is located in what was once part of Sao Paulo's old city center. The decline of the region began in the 1960s, as business moved to Paulista Avenue, a more central artery, and industries relocated to the cheaper outskirts. For about two decades, until the mid 1980s, low budget film companies moved in, earning the region the nickname of 'Garbage Mouth.' Drug users first arrived about three decades ago.
Brazilian researchers say Crackland emerged in the 1990s due to a confluence of two factors: the proximity of a major transportation hub, encompassing buses, subways and trains, and widespread mass killings in the city's most impoverished districts, which forced residents to congregate in the downtown's most dilapidated sector.
For much of the last 30 years, shop owners and residents feared being mugged. Today, the area the size of 10 soccer fields in Sao Paulo's old city center, is spotless and silent.
Lieutenant Sao Paulo Gov. Felicio Ramuth, who was picked by Gov. de Freitas to clean up Crackland, said last week that there was no police brutality linked to the scattering of residents.
'We had 50 police raids at the scene (and) 1,000 criminals were jailed,' he told daily O Estado de S.Paulo on Wednesday. 'We did not receive any accusation of police brutality.'
Ramuth said that 1,200 drug users who were in the area until a few weeks ago are now under treatment in clinics, but offered no evidence to support his claim. He added that he will deem Crackland free of drug users if its current condition remains for the next six months.
Gov. De Freitas, a former minister under President Jair Bolsonaro, is reportedly considering running against President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in the 2026 presidential election. His rivals claim he stands to gain political capital by ending Crackland, which could also make way for a 5-billion Brazilian reais ($900 million) project to relocate about 60 state government buildings to the area.
Critics of the government's strategy to end Crackland are crying foul. Catholic priest Júlio Lancelotti, who has worked with homeless people for most of his 76 years, said police brutality and the scattering of drug users will not solve the problem.
'It is not right to make political propaganda to say Crackland disappeared," Lancelotti said. "Crackland is not a physical area, it's about people. They are being taken to isolated regions, they are not going to clinics.'
The city hall of Guarulhos, a city within the Sao Paulo metropolitan area, expressed concern in a recent statement about the accusations by Lancelotti and other activists who claim that the residents of Crackland 'had been brought and abandoned' there. It added it will investigate the case.
Sao Paulo Mayor Nunes denied any wrongdoing.
'The problem will grow'
Giordano Magri, a University of Sao Paulo researcher specializing in urban issues, said the current crackdown on Crackland aims to remove the infrastructure for drug users to survive in the area, but they will eventually find similar conditions elsewhere.
'Since the governor and the mayor became more authoritarian, that ecosystem is gone. But they can't do this forever,' said Magri, who added that people leaving Crackland will have more than 70 smaller spots across the city to relocate to.
Rogério, the man whose guitar was broken, fears the situation could get worse in the coming days as hundreds seek to return.
'We are real people. I say that with a sour heart. I am garbage, I know,' he said. 'But now that they are scattering the garbage, the problem will grow.'
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