When Rio’s revelry ends — and reality kicks in

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With the Summer Olympics closing ceremony around the corner, are Brazilians raising their caipirinhas or crying in them? There’s reason for Rio to revel — the Zika scare has not turned into a Zika crisis. The polluted waters of Guanabara Bay, Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon and along Fort Copacabana haven’t induced outbreaks of retching among swimmers, rowers and sailors. Rafaela Silva, a young female judo athlete from Rio’s infamous “City of God” favela, gave Brazil its first gold medal of these Games, telling the world, “If I can set an example for the kids in the City of God, if they can believe in their dreams and find them through sport, then do it.”

With the Summer Olympics closing ceremony around the corner, are Brazilians raising their caipirinhas or crying in them? There’s reason for Rio to revel — the Zika scare has not turned into a Zika crisis. The polluted waters of Guanabara Bay, Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon and along Fort Copacabana haven’t induced outbreaks of retching among swimmers, rowers and sailors. Rafaela Silva, a young female judo athlete from Rio’s infamous “City of God” favela, gave Brazil its first gold medal of these Games, telling the world, “If I can set an example for the kids in the City of God, if they can believe in their dreams and find them through sport, then do it.”

Soon, though, the acrid whiffs of closing ceremony pyrotechnics will fade in an ocean breeze, surdo drums and samba whistles will go back into closets, and Rio will be in the full grip of an Olympic hangover. As with every rousing soiree, at some point guests stagger out, and the hosts, bags under their eyes, get back to everyday living. In the case of Brazil, however, it might not be the denouement they want.

Brazil’s Senate kept the momentum rolling against suspended President Dilma Rousseff with a vote earlier this month to indict her on charges she manipulated the country’s budget to mask Brazil’s economic woes. The impeachment trial is expected to take place this week. The country’s acting president, former Vice President Michel Temer, has failed to make Brazilians believe he’s the right helmsman for the myriad crises Brazil faces. Their disdain for him was broadcast around the world during the opening ceremonies, when his introduction drew loud booing throughout Maracana Stadium.

Once one of the world’s most promising nations — one of the advancing BRIC economies (Brazil, Russia India, China) of the early 2000s — Brazil is now neck-deep in its worst depression in decades. Like other economies that have natural resources as their fulcrum, Brazil’s is flagging because prices of those commodities, including oil, iron ore and beef, have dropped sharply. Brazil’s economy declined 4 percent last year, and likely will do the same this year.

Beyond the country’s economic troubles lurks its ever-rising crime rate. In Rio de Janeiro, murders are up 7 percent in the first six months this year. City police tallied 10,000 robberies in May alone. Much of the street violence stems from warring between drug gangs in Rio’s impoverished favelas.

Just as endemic are Brazil’s struggles with corruption. The center-left Workers Party, which launched Rousseff and her predecessor, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, to power, is embroiled in a multibillion-dollar bribery scandal involving Petrobras, the state-run oil company. Silva faces charges that he tried to obstruct a probe into the allegations surrounding Petrobras. Just how bad was it at Petrobras? Investigators tell The Associated Press that the oil company had a separate department to handle bribes.

Brazil might come out of these Olympics feeling pretty good about its performance with a global event that many thought it would not be able to pull off. The cataclysmic implosion many predicted hasn’t materialized. And for that, we say Maravilhoso, Brasil!

Soon, however, the world will exit Rio, leaving behind a country burdened by corruption, crime, economic malaise and polluted water. The hope is that Brazil’s leaders will aggressively tackle those scourges after the global spotlight swivels away.

— Chicago Tribune