| The
List: Murder Capitals of the World
Foreign Policy
October 1, 2008
Reliable global crime statistics are hard to come
by, but here are five cities that stand in a class
all their own when it comes to brutal, homicidal violence
Caracas, Venezuela
Population: 3.2 million
Murder rate: 130 per 100,000 residents (official)
What’s happening: The capital of Chávez
country, Caracas has become far more dangerous in
recent years than any South American city, even beating
out the once notorious Bogotá. What’s
worse, the city’s official homicide statistics
likely fall short of the mark because they omit prison-related
murders as well as deaths that the state never gets
around to properly “categorizing.” The
numbers also don’t count those who died while
“resisting arrest,” suggesting that Caracas’s
cops—already known for their brutality against
student protesters—might be cooking the books.
Many have pointed the finger at El Presidente, whose
government has failed to tackle the country’s
rising rates of violent crime. In fact, since Chávez
took over in 1998, Venezuela’s official homicide
rate has climbed 67 percent—mostly due to increased
drug and gang violence. Ramón Rodríguez
Chacín, who recently resigned as interior minister,
claimed in July that homicide has dropped 27 percent
since January—but experts say he’s just
playing with numbers. As for Caracas, some speculate
that its murder rate is closer to 160 per 100,000.
Cape Town, South Africa
Population: 3.5 million
Murder rate: 62 per 100,000 inhabitants
What’s happening: A European bastion in the
heart of turbulent South Africa, picturesque Cape
Town nonetheless has the country’s highest murder
rate. The city’s homicides usually take place
in suburban townships rather than in the more upscale
urban areas where tourists visit. According to the
South African Police Service, most of the Cape Town
area’s violent crimes happen between people
who know one another, including a horrific case last
year in which four males doused a female friend in
gasoline and lit her on fire. Occurring just outside
city limits, the incident apparently happened after
the assailants had taken hard drugs, the use of which
has risen along with Cape Town’s violent crime
rate. The whopping 12.7 percent rise in the city’s
murder rate from 2006 to 2007 certainly has local
politicians worried, especially as South Africa prepares
to host the 2010 World Cup. The government has hired
more police officers to prepare for the tournament,
which could help cut crime in soccer-fan hot spots.
But until better efforts are made to police Cape Town’s
poverty-stricken townships, it’s unlikely that
the murder rate—an average of 5.9 per day—will
see any major drop.
New Orleans, United States
Population: 220,614 to 312,000 (2007); estimates vary
due to displacement of people after Hurricane Katrina
in 2005.
Murder rate: Estimates range from 67 (New Orleans
Police Department) to 95 (Federal Bureau of Investigation)
per 100,000
What’s happening: With its grinding poverty,
an inadequate school system, a prevalence of public
housing, and a high incarceration rate, the Big Easy
has long been plagued with a high rate of violent
crime. Katrina didn’t help. Since the hurricane
struck in 2005, drug dealers have been fighting over
a smaller group of users, leading to many killings.
On just one four-block stretch of Josephine Street,
in the city center, four people were murdered in 2007
and 15 people shot, including a double homicide on
Christmas day. A precise murder rate is hard to pinpoint
because the population is swelling quickly, approaching
its pre-Katrina numbers. Whether you use New Orleans’s
own figures or the FBI’s, however, the city
remains the most deadly in the United States, easily
surpassing Detroit and Baltimore with 46 and 45 murders
per 100,000 people, respectively.
Moscow, Russia
Population: 10.4 million
Murder rate: 9.6 per 100,000 (estimate)
What’s happening: Moscow’s murder rate
is nothing compared with that of Caracas or Cape Town,
but the city still ranks way above other major European
capitals. London, Paris, Rome, and Madrid, for instance,
all had rates below 2 murders per 100,000 in 2006.
The Russian capital’s homicide rate is down
15 percent this year from last, but the recent surge
in hate crimes—including the deadly beating
of a Tajik carpenter by a gang of youths on Valentine’s
Day—suggests that the lull might be temporary.
Sixty ethnically motivated killings have already happened
this year, part of a sixfold increase in hate crimes
committed in the city during 2007. Several of the
murders have been attributed to ultranationalist skinhead
groups like the “Spas,” who killed 11
people in a 2006 bombing of a multiethnic market in
northern Moscow. The Russian government has finally
stepped up to combat the problem, assisting migrant
groups and cracking down on street gangs. Still, the
continued rise in extremist attacks is worrisome.
And along with migrants, journalists and other high-profile
people in Moscow might also want to be a little wary
in Russia—62 contract murders took place in
the country in 2005, according to official statistics.
Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
Population: 254,200 (2000 census)
Murder rate: 54 per 100,000 (2004 official figure)
What’s happening: The capital of island country
Papua New Guinea, Port Moresby might seem like a surprising
addition to this list. But its high violent crime
rates, along with high levels of police corruption
and gang activity, helped earn the city the dubious
title of “worst city” in a 2004 Economist
Intelligence Unit survey. With gangs called “raskols”
controlling the city centers and unemployment rates
hovering around 80 percent, it’s easy to see
how Port Moresby beat out the 130 other survey contenders.
Port Moresby’s police don’t seem to be
helping the crime situation—last November, five
officers were charged with offenses ranging from murder
to rape. And in August, the city’s police barracks
were put on a three-month curfew due to a recent slew
of bank heists reportedly planned inside the stations
by officers and their co-conspirators. Rising tensions
between Chinese migrants and native Papua New Guineans
are also cause for alarm, as are reports of increased
activity of organized Chinese crime syndicates.
Enlace Relacionado
Revelan que Caracas es la ciudad más
peligrosa de toda América Latina
Fuente: Infobae
La revista norteamericana Foreign Policy realizó
una lista de las urbes con más homicidios en
el mundo. Desde que Hugo Chávez llegó
al poder, la tasa de crímenes aumentó
un 67%
La violencia relacionada con pandillas y drogas son
la principal causa de que la tasa de homicidios en
Venezuela.
Desde que Hugo Chávez llegó al poder
en 1998, la tasa de criminalidad en el país
aumentó 67 por ciento, ubicándose ahora
en 52 por cada 100 mil habitantes. En Caracas, el
número de homicidios es de 130 por cada 100
mil habitantes, según cifras oficiales.
El informe de Foreign Policy ubica en primer lugar
a la capital venezolano como la ciudad más
peligrosa de los últimos años en América
Latina. Las cifras no incluyen los homicidios que
se producen en el interior de las cárceles,
por lo que el número sería mayor.
Las cifras de Venezuela superan los 24 homicidios
por cada 100 mil personas que se registran en México,
los 23 que hay en Brasil, los 9 de la Argentina y
los 1,9 de Chile.
Otra de las ciudades que se encuentran en los primeros
lugares es Nueva Orleans, donde la pobreza, su inadecuado
sistema escolar y la alta tasa de encarcelamiento
son las principales causas de la violencia, según
el relevamiento.
En Ciudad del Cabo los asesinatos crecieron 12,7%
entre 2006 y 2007, en una ciudad que será sede
del próximo Mundial de Fútbol en 2010.
Por su parte, la capital de Nueva Guinea, Port Moresby,
tiene sus principales causas en las pandillas y en
la corrupción policial. Moscú, donde
es más común el "crimen por odio"
-por ejemplo, racial-, la tasa de homicidios bajó
15% en relación al año pasado.
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