Brazil reviews Olympic security after Nice attack
[RIO DE JANEIRO] Brazil's government, on alert after the truck massacre of at least 84 people in France, was reviewing its security preparations on Friday for the upcoming Olympics in Rio de Janeiro and staging drills against possible attacks.
Already on guard because of recent attacks in Paris, Brussels and Orlando, Brazilian officials were meeting in Rio to assess preparations for the Games, which start Aug 5. The city is expecting as many as 500,000 foreign visitors.
"Brazil is confident about its preparations," Sports Minister Leonardo Picciani told Reuters.
"Personnel are ready, all the protocols have been followed and we are employing the most modern security and defense techniques."
In addition to a deployment of about 85,000 police, soldiers and other security personnel, over the twice the size of the force used at the London Olympics in 2012, Brazil has been cooperating with foreign intelligence services and militaries to share information, tactics and strategy.
It is not yet clear whether Thursday's killings in the French city of Nice had any connection to a militant group or was the solitary work of the lone attacker, a 31-year-old Tunisian living in France who was killed by police.
But the latter scenario, involving a so-called "lone wolf," is the sort of attack that security officials say is most worrisome because known networks are easier to track than random people.
On Friday, state police officials in Rio were conducting security drills, including a simulation of the detention of a terrorist involving a helicopter and a SWAT team. The drill follows other police and military exercises simulating bomb and chemical attacks and a marine scenario.
"No effort is being spared," Defense Minister Raul Jungmann told the Globo television network Friday morning, highlighting the training and the increased level of cooperation in recent months with foreign governments and intelligence agencies.
A joint security centre during the Olympics will operate with police representatives from dozens of countries and a separate intelligence centre has been set up to include officials from the United States, France, Britain, Spain and other partners.
So far, Brazilian and foreign officials say they are not aware of any credible threat to the Games in terms of intelligence "chatter."
Still, the recent attacks, and unconfirmed talk of plots against the Rio Games have heightened concerns, especially in a sprawling, chaotic metropolis where police even on normal days face serious logistical, financial and operational hurdles against violent crime.
According to a transcript of a parliamentary hearing released this week in France, a French military official in May said a foreign government had advised of a possible attack against the French Olympic delegation. Brazilian officials, however, said they were unaware of any such plot.
REUTERS
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