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Families look for answers after Brazil’s deadliest police raids

31 Oct 2025, 7:47 AM
Families look for answers after Brazil’s deadliest police raids

RIO DE JANEIRO, Oct 31 — Families lined up at a morgue yesterday in Rio de Janeiro to identify relatives killed in Brazil’s deadliest ever police raids, and funerals began to take place for four police officers who died taking part in the operation.

Authorities have said at least 121 people, including the officers, died in the Tuesday raids targeting the Comando Vermelho gang that controls the drug trade in several favelas — poor, densely populated neighborhoods woven through the city’s hilly terrain.

Many of the corpses of those killed were retrieved by locals from the forested area near the Penha favela on Tuesday night.

Yesterday morning, more than 100 bodies were still awaiting autopsies or identification at a local morgue. Relatives stood outside, looking through the fence and waiting for updates.

Some locals said they had found corpses with bound limbs and signs of torture, stirring protests and political backlash in a country where police killed over 6,000 people last year, according to government data.

Victor Santos, Rio state security secretary, yesterday said “any misconduct that may have occurred, which I believe did not happen, will be investigated”.

Rio de Janeiro Governor Claudio Castro called the operation a success and said the “only real victims” were the slain officers. All the others killed were criminals, he said.

Castro was scheduled yesterday to meet with several right-leaning state governors, who traveled to Rio to show support.

Lula vows to combat organised crime

A group of left-wing lawmakers led by congresswoman Taliria Petrone visited the Penha favela to meet and talk to locals.

“We will closely monitor the situation after yet another massacre in the favelas,” Petrone said on social media, calling for “truth, justice and accountability in the face of another operation marked by human rights violations”.

United Nations officials have criticised the heavy casualties of the military-style operation and said there should be an investigation.

Santos said there was no connection between the raids and the global events Rio will host next week tied to the UN’s COP30 climate negotiations, including the C40 summit of mayors addressing global warming and Prince William’s Earthshot Prize.

Brazil’s federal government was caught off guard by the operation by Rio state police, Justice Ricardo Lewandowski told journalists on Wednesday.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva called for coordinated work that targets the gangs without putting police and innocent families at risk.

Yesterday, he signed into law a bill aimed at increasing protection for public officials involved in fighting organised crime.

“The Brazilian government does not tolerate criminal organizations and acts to combat them with ever greater vigor,” he wrote on social media.

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