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in rio de janerio

2007-02-06 00:39:14 · 9 answers · asked by L K 1 in Travel Europe (Continental) Portugal

9 answers

are massive neighbourhoods where poor people live under really bad conditions. They live in barracks or old constructions or houses build by them selves.
U can get a better answer at Brazil category!

2007-02-06 03:06:51 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would like to add that there are a few favelas in portugal, too, in the more degraded areas of Lisbon and Porto. These were much more widespread about 10 years ago, and were an odd mixture of illegal immigrants and drug addicts. The most notorious one in Casal Ventoso in Lisbon was bulldozed about 5 years ago to make way for a social highrise development which seems to have absorbed a lot of the people who lived in the slums, although the social problems remain - you can still see people openly selling heroin at a notorious square at any time of the day. The favelas themselves still exist in a few isolated places. I think Porto still has a lot near the railway station. They have to be seen to be believed. For a close up view of life in a Rio de Janeiro Favela, watch the film "City of God" (Cidade de Deus) by Brazilian director Fernando Meirelles, whose next film, The Constant Gardener, also featured some amazing shots of slums in Nairobi, Kenya.

2007-02-07 01:41:06 · answer #2 · answered by Alyosha 4 · 0 0

All answers are correct, I just would like to add that a favela can be at any point of the city, so not just in the surroundings or in far away places. You ahve a 5 star hotel or a luxurious condominium and in the same street you can have a favela! So if you are going to Brazil look at the end of the street before you enter there, as it can be rather dangerous if suddenly you find yourself in a favela!

2007-02-06 23:25:53 · answer #3 · answered by Lisistrata 2 · 0 0

Yep, that's in Brazil. Rio de Janeiro has plenty of favelas, very poor neighborhoods set in the hills of the city, with a high crime rate, where the people are afraid to go.

2007-02-06 03:46:04 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A favela is a slum. Usually a term used in Brazilian Portuguese to describe many areas in large cities.

2007-02-06 10:45:48 · answer #5 · answered by Nicky C 2 · 0 0

Nairobi conjures all the romance and experience of their vivid colonial times and is a great place to invest your holiday, discover more with hotelbye . Among the things worth see could be the Nairobi's rich record and tribal culture is produced your in its excellent museums and the Karen Blixen Museum in one of many museum most visited. Also in Nairobi you are able to visit Nairobi National Park. The park is just a rhino sanctuary and safeguards over 50 of those really endangered creatures. Along with the rhinos, readers could see: lions, gazelles, buffaloes, warthogs, cheetahs, zebras, giraffes, and ostriches, and a lot more than 400 species of birds have now been noted in the wetlands and here, the Nairobi Safari Walk is a popular interest offering animal lovers the opportunity to spot wildlife on base, and strolling trails weave about the location called Hippo Pools. Nairobi is definitely a city where whole the household will enjoy.

2016-12-18 21:42:43 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

They are very...VERY poor neighborhoods where there is lots of crime. Prostitution and drug use....lots of it! Some of them are so violent that the police refuse to go in to patrol because if they do, they will be shot and killed!

2007-02-06 05:10:15 · answer #7 · answered by Lancer 3 · 0 0

"favela" is a portuguese word for "ghetto"

2007-02-06 09:46:08 · answer #8 · answered by pokeralho 1 · 0 0

I think very poor neighbourhoods.

2007-02-06 01:22:21 · answer #9 · answered by cpinatsi 7 · 0 0

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