Sun.Star Cebu

AT LEAST 25 DEAD DURING BRAZILIAN POLICE RAID IN RIO

- EDITOR: Justin k. Vestil

RIO DE JANEIRO—Police targeting drug trafficker­s raided a slum in Rio de Janeiro on May 6, 2021 and at least one officer and two dozen others died after being shot, authoritie­s said.

The civil police’s press office confirmed the death of the cop and 24 alleged “criminals” in a message to the Associated Press.

A police helicopter flew low over the Jacarezinh­o favela as heavily armed men fled police by leaping from roof to roof, according to images shown on local television.

One woman told The Associated Press she saw police kill a badly wounded man she described as helpless and unarmed who they found after he had fled into her house.

Felipe Curi, a detective in Rio’s civil police, denied there had been any executions.

“There were no suspects killed. They were all trafficker­s or criminals who tried to take the lives of our police officers and there was no other alternativ­e,” he said during a press conference.

Police had to struggle to enter the favela because of concrete barriers built by the criminals, according to the detective. Shooting spread throughout the community. During the operation, several people Curi described as criminals invaded neighborin­g houses trying to

hide. Six were arrested, he said.

The police also seized 16 pistols, six rifles, a submachine gun, 12 grenades and a shotgun.

Service on a subway line was temporaril­y suspended “due to intense shooting in the region,” according to a statement from the

company that operates it. Earlier, two subway passengers were injured when a stray bullet shattered the glass of one car.

Jacarezinh­o, one of the city’s most populous favelas, with some 40,000 residents, is dominated by the Comando Vermelho,

one of Brazil’s leading criminal organizati­ons. The police consider Jacarezinh­o to be one of the group’s headquarte­rs.

Thursday’s operation was aimed at investigat­ing the recruitmen­t of teenagers to hijack trains and commit other crimes, police said in a statement.

A group of about 50 residents in Jacarezinh­o poured into a narrow street on Thursday afternoon to follow members of the state legislatur­e’s human rights commission as it conducted an inspection. They shouted “justice” while clapping their hands and some raised their right fists into the air.

Human Rights Watch Brazil said in a statement that the public prosecutor must immediatel­y investigat­e possible police abuses.

The police statement said the criminal gang has a “warlike structure of soldiers equipped with rifles, grenades, bulletproo­f vests, pistols, camouflage­d clothing and other military accessorie­s.”

The Candido Mendes University’s Public Safety Observator­y said that at least 12 police operations in Rio state this year have resulted in three or more deaths.

Observator­y director Silvia Ramos said Thursday’s raid was among the deadliest in the city’s recent history.

Many of them appear to violate a ruling by Brazil’s Supreme Court last year that ordered the police to suspend operations during the pandemic, restrictin­g them to “absolutely exceptiona­l” situations.

The Supreme Court declined to comment when asked by The Associated Press if Thursday’s operation would qualify.

Rio police killed an average of more than five people a day during the first quarter of 2021, the most lethal start of a year since the state government began regularly releasing such data more than two decades ago, according to the Observator­y. /

 ?? /AP ?? DEADLY DRUG RAID. Drugs seized during a police raid are displayed for the press at the city police headquarte­rs in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Thursday, May 6, 2021. At least 25 people died during the raid, including one police officer and 24 suspects, according to the press office of Rio’s civil police.
/AP DEADLY DRUG RAID. Drugs seized during a police raid are displayed for the press at the city police headquarte­rs in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Thursday, May 6, 2021. At least 25 people died during the raid, including one police officer and 24 suspects, according to the press office of Rio’s civil police.

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