A top Brazilian security official has promised to "guarantee absolute peace" at the Rio Olympics, despite safety fears after last week's massacre claimed by Islamist militants in Paris.
"Brazil has become a leading example for (security at) major events," Andrei Rodrigues, secretary for large events in Brazil's justice ministry, said yesterday in an interview with CBN radio.
Rodrigues said "no one can be indifferent" to Friday's bloodshed in Paris, where at least 129 people were killed and scores more wounded.
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But Rodrigues said Brazil -- with experience from hosting the 2014 football World Cup, a papal visit in 2013 and other mega events -- has proved fully prepared for the huge challenge of hosting the Olympics in Rio next summer.
"This is our task, our mission, to guarantee... An atmosphere of absolute security, absolute peace," he said.
Rodrigues reiterated plans to deploy 47,000 security personnel and 38,000 members of the military, double the total number of security staff at the 2012 London Olympics.
Brazilian police work alongside counterparts around the world to study their methods and Rio will feature an international coordination center for different police forces and "another specifically for police agencies combating terrorism," he said.
"These are actions that we already put into place so that we arrive at August 5 completely prepared," he said.
"I would say Brazil has made the effort, has the ability to prepare, to organize the security at the Games.