Massive Police Raid On Rio Favela Leaves At Least 22 Dead

Favela Massive Police Raid On Rio Favela Leaves At Least 22 Dead
WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
Telegram
LinkedIn
Print

A massive unannounced anti-crime operation by a Brazil special Police division in a Rio de Janeiro slum has left at least 22 people dead. This raid comes a year after the bloodiest-ever favela raid in the city’s history.

A further seven people were hospitalized, according to health officials, while police said one of the victims was a female bystander felled by a stray bullet.

Military police said they came under gunfire as they approached the northern Rio slum of Vila Cruzeiro in the early morning hours with the mission of locating and arresting “criminal leaders.”

Read Also: Bolsonaro’s Gov’t Threatening Democracy In Brazil – Jurists

The toll doubled from the initially reported 11 deaths as more bodies were uncovered in the aftermath.

Police said at least 11 of the dead were “suspects.” At least 19 schools in the area closed because of the gunfire, residents said. Police helicopters were also struck by bullets during the deadly exchange.

Police often carry out raids in Rio’s teeming slums in a bid to fight drug trafficking.

This time, they said they were looking for gang leaders from other parts of Brazil hiding out in Vila Cruzeiro.

“It was an operation planned for weeks, but we identified criminal movements during the night and decided to intervene,” said team member Colonel Luiz Henrique Marinho Pires.

He said the suspects were readying to move to another favela.

This was the deadliest police raid since 28 people died a year ago in a favela called Jacarezinho — the largest such toll in the city’s history.

Vila Cruzeiro, a favela crowded onto a hillside not far from Rio de Janeiro’s international airport, was also the scene of a violent confrontation in February, when police killed eight people.

Tuesday’s pre-dawn raid targeted the Comando Vermelho, or Red Command, one of Brazil’s most powerful crime gangs “responsible for more than 80 percent of the shootings in Rio,” a police spokesman told TV Globo.

Officers seized 13 assault rifles, four pistols, 20 motorcycles and 10 cars in the raid.

The operation was criticized in some quarters for its use of overwhelming force and the Federal Public Prosecutor’s Office announced the opening of an investigation into police conduct.

“Another massacre. Schools closed, thousands of people terrorized,” tweeted left-wing city councilman Tarcisio Motta.

“The policy of extermination runs its course in Rio.”

Residents and activists have often denounced official abuse during such anti-crime operations, including extrajudicial killings of suspects, which they say often goes unpunished.

“These operations in the favelas put the entire population at risk and prevent the functioning of public services. We know they would never be tolerated in upscale neighborhoods,” Guilherme Pimentel, a public defender, told AFP.

Rio police officers were meant to start wearing cameras on their uniforms this month to film all acts in the line of duty, but use of the equipment has been postponed.

 

Africa Daily News, New York

WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
Telegram
LinkedIn
Print