National Post

Police sniper kills Rio bus hijacker

No hostages hurt in dramatic end to standoff

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RIO DE JANEIRO • A police sniper in Rio de Janeiro on Tuesday shot dead a man who had hijacked a bus on a bridge across Guanabara Bay and taken 37 people hostage, in a dramatic end to an incident that underlined the daily grind of violence in the Brazilian city.

The hijacking, from which all the hostages emerged unharmed, began before dawn when a masked man commandeer­ed a commuter bus on the bridge connecting Rio with the city of Niteroi. The man took 37 people in the bus hostage before freeing six of them, officials said.

About four hours later, the hostage-taker walked out of the bus, flung a backpack toward police and then fell to the ground as he tried to re- enter the vehicle, TV images showed. Police officials said he was shot by a police sniper.

no family member of an innocent person will be in tears.

Videos showed the sniper, positioned for more than an hour on top of a fire truck, celebratin­g after shooting the man.

Police did not provide more details on the hostage- taker. In a news conference later, Rio de Janeiro state governor Wilson Witzel said there was a strong smell of gasoline in the bus and that the hijacker had a lighter in his hand.

“Congratula­tions to the Rio de Janeiro police for the successful action that ended the bus hijacking on the Rio-niteroi bridge this morning,” President Jair Bolsonaro wrote on Twitter. “The criminal was neutralize­d and no hostage was injured. Today, no family member of an innocent person will be in tears.”

Bolsonaro, a far-right former federal congressma­n who represente­d the state of Rio de Janeiro for nearly three decades, has advocated police take a tougher line to combat years of rising crime.

In 2015, he said Brazil’s military police should “kill more people.” Since taking office, he has sought to broaden citizen access to guns and pushed measures to protect police if they kill on the job.

Although the number of murders in Rio has fallen sharply in recent months, the city’s police have killed 15 per cent more people so far this year compared with the same period in 2018.

A total of 881 people, or nearly five per day, died at the hands of police between January and June.

This week’s bus hijacking also highlighte­d a grim reality of life in Rio, where many use specialize­d apps to safely navigate their way past daily gun battles between police, drug gangs, and vigilante militias comprised of current and former cops.

 ?? Ricardo Casiano / Agencia O Dia / REUTERS ?? A bus hijacker holds a gun to a hostage’s head in Rio de Janeiro on Tuesday. The gunman was later killed by a sniper.
Ricardo Casiano / Agencia O Dia / REUTERS A bus hijacker holds a gun to a hostage’s head in Rio de Janeiro on Tuesday. The gunman was later killed by a sniper.

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