Over 110 killed in Rio police crackdown on powerful narco gang

Residents line up bodies of people killed the day before during a police raid targeting the Comando Vermelho gang at the Complexo da Penha favela in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Oct. 29, 2025.(AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo)
Short Url
Updated 30 October 2025
Follow

Over 110 killed in Rio police crackdown on powerful narco gang

  • President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was left horrified by the death toll from the operation
  • Rio’s state government hailed the operation as a success in its bid to halt the takeover of territory by a powerful narco gang
  • The provisional death toll now stood at 119, including 115 suspected criminals and four police officers

RIO DE JANEIRO: Residents of a Rio de Janeiro community lined up their dead in the street Wednesday after Brazil’s bloodiest police raid killed at least 119 people, spotlighting the city’s controversial war against drug gangs entrenched in poor neighborhoods.
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was left horrified by the death toll from the operation, just days before Brazil hosts COP30 global climate talks in the Amazon city of Belem.
While activists and the United Nations raised concerns over the use of force by police, Rio’s state government hailed the operation as a success in its bid to halt the takeover of territory by the powerful Comando Vermelho (Red Command) gang.
The heavily-armed group — which dropped bombs on officers from drones — has taken over large swathes of Rio de Janeiro in recent years, concentrating operations in sprawling favelas that are home to millions of people.
A day after the police operation paralyzed the city, residents of the Complexo da Penha favela recovered dozens of bodies from a forest on its outskirts, AFP journalists reported.
One man was decapitated and another completely disfigured, with residents denouncing what they termed “executions.”
“The state came to massacre, it wasn’t a (police) operation. They came directly to kill, to take lives,” one woman, who did not wish to give her name, told AFP.
State authorities said the provisional death toll now stood at 119, including 115 suspected criminals and four police officers.
The Public Defender’s Office, a state body in Rio that provides legal assistance to the poor, reported at least 132 deaths.

- War-like scenes -

Large numbers of officers who took part in the operation were backed by armored vehicles, helicopters and drones, as the streets of the favelas saw war-like scenes.
The police and suspected gang members traded heavy gunfire as terrified residents scrambled for cover.
While the operation unfolded, Comando Vermelho seized dozens of buses and used them to barricade main highways, and sent drones to attack the police with explosives, authorities said.
State governor Claudio Castro described the raid against what he has termed “narcoterrorism” as a “success” and said the only victims were the police officers who were killed.
Secretary of the military police, Marcelo de Menezes, told a press conference that elite special forces had deliberately pushed “criminals” into the forest abutting the favela, where the majority of fighting had taken place, to “protect the population.”
Civil police secretary Felipe Curi meanwhile alleged the bodies displayed in the street were in their underwear because they had been stripped by residents of the “camouflage clothing, vests, and weapons” they had on them.

- ‘Executed’ -

But angry residents accused the police of summary killings.
“There are people who have been executed, many of them shot in the back of the head, shot in the back. This cannot be considered public safety,” said Raull Santiago, a 36-year-old resident and activist.
Lawyer Albino Pereira Neto, who represents three families that lost relatives, told AFP some of the bodies bore “burn marks” and that a number of those killed had been tied up.
Some were “murdered in cold blood,” he said.
Lula said the federal government had been unaware of the operation.
“The president is horrified by the number of fatal incidents and was surprised that an operation of this scale was set up without the knowledge of the federal government,” Justice Minister Ricardo Lewandowski said.
UN chief Antonio Guterres was “greatly concerned” by the number of casualties, his spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters.
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said it was “horrified” and called for “swift investigations.”


Germany says UN rights rapporteur for Palestinian territories should quit

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

Germany says UN rights rapporteur for Palestinian territories should quit

BERLIN: German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul on Thursday called for the resignation of the UN special rapporteur for the Palestinian territories, Francesca Albanese, over comments she made allegedly targeting Israel at a conference.
“I respect the UN system of independent rapporteurs. However, Ms Albanese has made numerous inappropriate remarks in the past. I condemn her recent statements about Israel. She is untenable in her position,” Wadephul wrote on X.
Albanese has said that her comments are being falsely portrayed. She denounced what she called “completely false accusations” and “manipulation” of her words in an interview with broadcaster France 24 on Wednesday.
Speaking via videoconference at a forum in Doha on Saturday organized by the Al Jazeera network, Albanese referred to a “common enemy of humanity” after criticizing “most of the world” and much of Western media for enabling the “genocide” in Gaza.
“And this is a challenge — the fact that instead of stopping Israel, most of the world has armed, given Israel political excuses, political sheltering, economic and financial support,” she said.
Albanese said that “international law has been stabbed in the heart” but added that there is an opportunity since “we now see that we as a humanity have a common enemy.”
Wadephul’s French counterpart Jean-Noel Barrot on Wednesday made the same call for Albanese to resign over the comments.
“France unreservedly condemns the outrageous and reprehensible remarks made by Ms Francesca Albanese, which are directed not at the Israeli government, whose policies may be criticized, but at Israel as a people and as a nation, which is absolutely unacceptable,” Barrot told French lawmakers.
Albanese posted video of her comments to X on Monday, writing in the post that “the common enemy of humanity is THE SYSTEM that has enabled the genocide in Palestine, including the financial capital that funds it, the algorithms that obscure it and the weapons that enable it.”
In her interview with France 24, which was recorded before Barrot’s statement, she contended that her comments were being misrepresented.
“I have never, ever, ever said ‘Israel is the common enemy of humanity’,” Albanese told the broadcaster.