Latest News

Lula says Brazil will seek independent probe into 'disastrous' Rio police raid

The Brazilian president Luiz inacio Lula da silva said on Tuesday that his government would push for an independent investigation into the raid by police last week, which killed 121 people including four police officers.

He told reporters in Belem, ahead of the COP30 summit on climate change: "It is important to know under what circumstances it occurred." "The judge ordered arrest warrants, not mass killings - yet there was mass killing." The October 28 operation was the deadliest ever in Brazil's recent history. The operation on October 28 targeted the Comando Vermelho, a gang that controls drug trafficking in a number of favelas (poor, densely-populated neighborhoods) woven into the city's hills.

Rio de Janeiro state officials described it as a success. Claudio Castro, the state governor, said that the "only true victims" were the officers who were killed and all others were criminals.

The raids highlighted a complex scenario for Lula. A leftist, Lula has tried to reconcile growing public support and international concerns about human rights violations.

"The truth is, some people may view the operation's death toll as a success. Lula stated that he believed the state's response was disastrous. (Reporting and writing by Katy Daigle, Lisandra Paraguassu, Paul Simao; editing by Gabriel Araujo)

(source: Reuters)