FEW places illustrate the modern role of the Brazilian army better than Tabat-inga, a city of 62,000 on the shared border point between Brazil, Colombia and Peru. The frontier, protected by Amazon rainforest, has not budged since the Portuguese built a now-ruined fort there in the 1700s. But Julio Nagy, a local commander, has his sights trained on unconventional threats. In February and March his troops intercepted 3.7 tonnes of cannabis. Last year they destroyed an airstrip built by illegal gold miners. Inside a small army-run zoo-home to toucans, a jaguar and even a manatee-garish macaws rescued from animal traffickers squawk intermittently.
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