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Parts of a mutilated body washed up on the sands of Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday, police said, just meters (yards) from where beach volleyball athletes will compete in the
upcoming Olympics. The discovery, first reported to a newspaper by a Rio street vendor, is the latest to unnerve the city as it grapples with rising crime, a recession and exhausted state
finances at a time when it hoped to be celebrating the first Olympics ever held in South America. It was unclear Wednesday afternoon what conditions may have led to the mutilated body but a
policeman standing guard by a security perimeter confirmed its existence to Reuters. The Olympics, which start Aug. 5, were intended to show off an economic boom that has since fizzled in
Latin America’s biggest country. Now the games come as the state of Rio de Janeiro awaits emergency funding of 2.9 billion reais ($892 million) to ensure financing for public services. The
Olympics also will play out with a backdrop of political instability as Brazil’s Senate tries suspended President Dilma Rousseff, who is accused of accounting tricks in the government
budget, to determine whether she will be ousted for good. The trial is expected to finish after the games. Earlier this week, police and firemen demonstrated at Rio’s international airport,
protesting their missed wages and greeting arriving passengers with a sign reading “Welcome to Hell.”