Is this the world’s smelliest place? Brazil town reels after 5,000 cows drown in ship sinking
Barcarena, on the Amazon River, is trying to clean up the thousands of dead cattle

Forget what you’ve seen on shows like Dirty Jobs. Being a dockworker in the Brazilian port of Barcarena is almost certainly the worst occupation in the world right now.
Last week, a freighter bound for Venezuela with 5,000 head of cattle sank into the murky depths of the Amazon river, spilling hundreds of gallons of diesel fuel and dooming the animals to a watery death.
What happened next is like something out of a Gabriel García Márquez novel. Local residents pulled dead animals out of the river, loading them on carts and dragging some of them home through the dusty streets tied to their bumpers. It was a feast of free beef.

The cause of the sinking is under investigation, according to Brazilian authorities, who have taken the 28 crew members of the Lebanese-flagged “Haidar” into custody. Port officials cited by Venezuelan media said the boat could have been overloaded, or sank because of a leak in the hull.
The disaster has been the subject of ongoing media fascination in Venezuela, where soaring inflation and economic mismanagement have led to chronic food shortages.