Police in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro are to investigate claims that tourists visiting some of the city's shanty towns are being offered a chance to meet armed drug dealers.
The police say they want to establish if the lives of tourists are being put at risk, but the company involved has defended its policy. For many years guided tours of favelas or shanty towns have been an option for people visiting Rio de Janeiro.
While many are dominated by drug gangs and extremely dangerous, others are considered safe enough to visit, though some critics have argued this aspect of tourism in the city is distasteful and ill-conceived.
The Brazilian newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo has now reported that one company offering these tours includes a chat with what it calls an "armed soldier". A journalist from the paper, who was posing as a tourist, went on a tour of Rocinha - said to be the largest shanty town in Latin America.
While there he was introduced to an armed man belonging to the faction that controls the sale of drugs in the area, who explained he had already spent nine years in jail. The gunman said his principal worries were the police and rival drug gangs.
Another man armed with a machine gun told how he worked 12-hour shifts and earned $180 (£90) a week. The tour company has been accused of glamorising criminal activity.
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