Grim Aftermath of Brazil's Deadly Police Raid: A Nation in Turmoil
In Brazil's deadliest police raids, 121 people including four officers were killed. Families mourned at the morgue, while political tensions rose over alleged misconduct. Local and international voices condemned the operation and called for accountability. Authorities, however, maintain its necessity against gang crime.
Families congregated at a Rio de Janeiro morgue on Thursday, identifying relatives after Brazil's deadliest police raids. Funerals for four officers commenced, as authorities confirmed 121 deaths, including the officers, in Tuesday's raids targeting the Comando Vermelho gang, which controls the drug trade in several favelas.
Locals reported retrieving bodies from a nearby forest, some showing signs of torture, fueling protests and political uproar in a country where police killed over 6,000 people last year. Rio state security secretary Victor Santos affirmed that any misconduct would be thoroughly investigated.
Rio Governor Claudio Castro labeled the operation a success, deeming the slain officers as the only real victims. Meanwhile, left-wing lawmakers, along with international organizations like the UN, decried the operation's high casualty rate, demanding justice and accountability amid heightened political friction.
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