RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) – At least three people died on Thursday during a major police raid in a dense warren of Rio de Janeiro slums, state military police said, in the latest bloody confrontation in Brazil’s second-largest city.
Tactical teams from Rio de Janeiro’s civil and military police raided the Alemao complex to take down an alleged criminal organization suspected of involvement in cargo theft and bank robberies which was planning incursions into rival slums, the military police said in a statement.
It said around 400 officers were involved, with support from four aircraft and 10 armored vehicles. At least three people died, it said: one police officer, and two alleged criminals. A woman was also injured.
Unconfirmed reports suggested the death toll could rise significantly.
“There are signs of major human rights violations, and the possibility of this being one of the operations with the highest number of deaths in Rio de Janeiro,” the state public defender’s office said in a statement.
Rio state police forces regularly carry out deadly raids in the city’s sprawling slums. President Jair Bolsonaro has long supported heavy-handed tactics by police in their fight against organized crime, saying gangsters should “die like cockroaches.”
After the raid, locals could be seen bundling injured people into the back of vehicles to be taken to hospital as police watched. Gilberto Santiago Lopes, from the Anacrim Human Rights Commission, said the police refused to help.
“We had to carry them away in a beverage truck, and then flag a local resident in their car to take them to hospital,” he said. “(The police) don’t aim to arrest them, they aim to kill them, so if they’re injured, they think they don’t deserve help.”
The military police declined comment beyond their statement.
Local residents were furious and yelled at the police.
“We’re scared to live here,” one local screamed after the raid. “Where are we? Afghanistan? In a war? In Iraq? If they want a war, send them to Iraq.”
(Reporting by Ricardo Moraes and Sergio Queiroz, Editing by Rosalba O’Brien)