Kuwait Times

Brazil inmate dead after foiled escape dressed as woman

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RIO DE JANEIRO: A Brazilian drug trafficker, who had attempted to escape from prison disguised as his teenage daughter, was found dead in his cell yesterday, officials said. Clauvino da Silva, nicknamed “Shorty” or “Baixinho” in Portuguese, made headlines after he was caught Saturday trying to walk out the front door of a Rio de Janeiro jail.

Da Silva, 42, wore a silicon mask, long dark wig, glass- es, white flip flops and the clothes, including pink Tshirt, blue denim jeans and black bra, belonging to his 19-year-old daughter, who was visiting him. She had planned to stay behind while he made his getaway.

Da Silva, who was serving a 73-year jail sentence, was caught after guards noticed he looked “suspicious”. His daughter and seven other visitors were detained over the foiled breakout.

A video released by the state prisons administra­tion department shows da Silva stripping off his elaborate disguise in front of officials. Three days after his failed escape, da Silva, a senior member of the Red Command, one of Brazil’s main crime groups, was found dead in his cell in a maximum security prison. Officials said he appeared to have hanged himself with a bed sheet. An investigat­ion has been launched into his death.

Experts estimate hundreds of prisoners are killed in Brazilian prisons every year, mostly in confrontat­ions between rival gangs battling for control of one of the world’s most important cocaine markets and traffickin­g routes. Brazil has the world’s third-largest prison population after the United States and China, with more than 800,000 inmates.

The death of Silva is an embarrassm­ent for Rio’s prison authoritie­s, which had initially cheered their actions in preventing his unusual escape plan. Brazil’s jails have become a major headache for new tough-oncrime President Jair Bolsonaro. Last week, at least 57 people died after a prison riot broke out in the northern state of Para. More than 50 inmates died in similar circumstan­ces in May during prison riots in the northern state of Amazonas.

Prison gangs, originally formed to protect inmates and advocate for better conditions, have come to wield vast power that reaches far beyond prison walls. The gangs are linked to bank heists, drug traffickin­g and gun-running, with jailed kingpins running their empires via smuggled cellphones.

 ?? — AFP ?? Brazilian inmate Clauvino da Silva wears a wig and mask after he was captured on Aug 3, 2019.
— AFP Brazilian inmate Clauvino da Silva wears a wig and mask after he was captured on Aug 3, 2019.

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