Should tourists fear to visit Brazil?-- Online Jobs - Work From Home

Should tourists fear to visit Brazil?

Posted by Online Jobs on Nov 24th, 2009
2009
Nov 24

Simple answer is no! No matter what being paranoid that you will get robbed can ruin your vacation, and there is no point to come all the way to Rio and feel unsafe. Touring and traveling in Brazil is a memorable experience and chance of a lifetime to sample some of Latin America’s most stunning sites.

But being geek tourist with a money belt hanging on your belly and speaking loudly in a foreign tongue you will not doubt be targeted, including on the stunning beaches of Brazil. That money belt as a camera around your neck is a calling card for being hit indeed.

You can certainly take a other precautions, like staying in Zona Sul while visiting Rio de Janiero. But no matter where you will stay watch over your shoulder, do not linger as if you are lost, do not dress in expensive clothing, wear prominently any jewelry, leave bags unattended even in sidewalk restaurants, walk alone in deserted streets, especially at night and especially near any favelas, Rio de Janeiro’s notorious slums.

When Chicago was not selected and in fact came last, one of the arguments noted were the Chicago city crime statistics. Of course Rio de Janeiro is well known for the very same factor – violence.

Let’s face it, Rio de Janeiro is a metropolis of 6 million inhabitants, and as in any city of this size anywhere else around the world, the tourists in Rio best know where to go and where not to go.

Tourism was reported to have grown in 2008 over 2007 by some 7%. Of that, a third were tourists from other countries. The increase seems at first to be fairly significant but statistics showed that the increase was the lowest of all the major cities in Brazil.

In view of the fact Rio has been awarded the 2016 Olympic games and the planning committees in Rio already started meeting to decide the steps they need to take, curtailing crime is one of the key priorities to lure more tourists into the city, and not just for the games that are six and half years away.

Bottom line, common sense does it, as anywhere. If approached to shell out your money, don’t fight it, hand it out, and that includes to little kids, especially if there are more than one and you are alone. They are poor and have nothing to lose.

To avoid most of these situations as much as possible stay in and move with crowds. Always spread out your valuables, namely cash. Leave some behind in your room. Never carry all your credit cards on you. Nor your cash.

Mellow out and you’ll love in it Rio de Janeiro. People are friendly and cops are all over and the closer to the games, countdown having already started, there is bound to be heavier police presence on the streets.

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