Hundreds of heavily armed Brazilian police raided slum areas of Rio in a drug raid today, touching off firefights likened to scenes from a war and leaving at least 64 people dead, Brazilian officials said.
As many as 2500 officers as well as armoured vehicles and helicopters took part in the raid that targeted one of Brazil鈥檚 main drug-trafficking gangs in two poor neighbourhoods called favelas.
War-like scenes unfolded during the operation, which was still going on. Images circulating on social media showed columns of smoke rising into the sky as bursts of gunfire rang out.
Rio state Governor Claudio Castro described the operation as the largest in the state鈥檚 history.
The central Government said the raid aimed to stop a gang called Comando Vermelho from expanding.
The death toll stands at 64, including four police officers, a source in the security services said. The source did not say if the other fatalities were all criminal suspects.
Raids in the favelas are common but this was the deadliest one yet. Until now the highest death toll came in a raid in 2021 that left 28 people dead.
Police also seized at least 42 rifles along with a large quantity of drugs, Castro said. At least 81 people were arrested.
The raid focused on two clusters of favelas in northern Rio, the Complexo da Penha and Complexo do Alemao, located near the international airport.
An AFP photographer saw heavily armed police officers taking away detained men, most of them barefoot and shirtless.
Favelas ruled by gangs
The police mobilised two helicopters, 32 armoured vehicles, and 12 demolition vehicles, used to destroy barricades erected by drug-traffickers to prevent police from entering the narrow streets of the favelas.
Major police operations are frequent in Rio, Brazil鈥檚 main tourist destination, particularly in the favelas, poor and densely populated neighbourhoods often ruled by criminal gangs.
Castro posted a video on X of what he described as a gang-controlled drone launching a projectile from the cloudy sky.
鈥淭his is how the Rio police are treated by criminals: with bombs dropped by drones. This is the scale of the challenge we face. This is not ordinary crime, but narco-terrorism,鈥 he said.
Last year, about 700 people died during police operations in Rio, almost two a day.
In 2020, Brazil鈥檚 Supreme Court imposed restrictions on counter-drug operations in the favelas, such as limiting the use of helicopters and operations in areas near schools or health centres. However, the same court lifted those restrictions this year.
Experts and human rights organisations have criticised this strategy by the security forces, deeming it ineffective against criminal organisations.
The Human Rights Commission of the Rio State Legislative Assembly said it would demand 鈥渆xplanations of the circumstances of the action, which has once again transformed Rio鈥檚 favelas into a theatre of war and barbarism鈥, Congresswoman Dani Monteiro, president of the commission, told AFP.
-Agence France-Presse
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