Hi,

It will be very rare/difficult for you to do anything if you are
walking during the day or as a group.

In Brazil, most capitals or cities that present a level of risk, are
always related to lack of lighting (nocturnal accidents on deserted
streets) or to space fights/places that frequent (gangs, points of
sale and drug use) .

I quickly looked at 2 reports on Violence in my Country; I can tell
you that Curitiba does not appear among the most dangerous cities; And
from the capitals (27) it occupies position 17 of the 2016 ranking.

But it is no alarming fact, the experience I have to travel outside
Brazil is that in Brazil, as in other developing countries, it is good
to walk with the bag closed, not to leave things on the floor or on
the table.

Reports in pt_BR:

https://www.mapadaviolencia.org.br/
http://www.ipea.gov.br/portal/index.php?option=com_content&id=33410&Itemid=432
https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viol%C3%AAncia_no_Brasil#Cidades_mais_violentas

Em ter, 7 de mai de 2019 às 10:52, Ondrej Novy <n...@ondrej.org> escreveu:
>
> Hi,
>
> according to Global Peace Index [1], we have this trend:
>
> DebConf 17, Canada, rank 6
> DebConf 18, Taiwan, rank 34
> DebConf 19, Brazil, rank 106
> DebConf 20, Israel, rank 146
>
> Anything we should be afraid of? :)
>
> But without kidding: Is there anything we should know about security/crime in 
> Curitiba and Brazil? Rate of crime (robberies, kidnappings and homicides) is 
> really high (in compare to for example Europe). Any recommendations for 
> foreigners? What we should do and what we shouldn't.
>
> Thanks a lot.
>
> [1] 
> http://visionofhumanity.org/app/uploads/2018/08/GPI2018-A2-poster-art-1.pdf
>
> --
> Best regards
>  Ondřej Nový
>

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