This article is from: srnnews.com

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — A Brazilian police operation in Rio de Janeiro favelas on Wednesday killed seven presumed drug traffickers, including a gang chief, as well as a local resident caught in the crossfire, law enforcement officials said.

Claúdio Augusto dos Santos, a drug-trafficking boss and member of the notorious Red Command criminal organization, was among those killed in the operation in central Rio, Secretary of the Military Police Col. Marcelo de Menezes said in a press conference.

In retaliation, police said “criminals” set fire to a bus and blocked roads in Rio’s central zone, leading to four arrests.

Márcio Sousa, the driver of the bus set alight, reported that the attackers boarded the vehicle with two bottles of gasoline.

“It all happened very fast,” Sousa told The Associated Press during an interview. “There is no security. Rio de Janeiro is like this — it is not for amateurs.”

Police set up the massive raid after localizing dos Santos using intelligence, de Menezes said.

Some 150 military police officers were involved in the operation which targeted the sprawling urban communities of Prazeres, Fallet, Fogueteiro, Coroa, Escondidinho and Paula Ramos, according to the military police on X, who also said that weapons including rifles, pistols and revolvers were seized.

Police also reported a local couple was taken hostage and the man was killed in the shootout that ensued. The woman was rescued.

Military police personnel will remain in the area indefinitely to ensure security and guarantee freedom of movement, Menezes said, who referred to drug traffickers as “narco-terrorists” – a term used by U.S. President Donald Trump.

Local news outlet UOL reported on March 8 that the U.S. administration is considering classifying Brazilian criminal organization groups PCC and Red Command as terrorist organizations.

Last year, a huge raid against Red Command resulted in more than 120 deaths in Penha and Complexo de Alemao favelas, the most lethal in Rio’s history. The death toll sparked protests and calls for Gov. Cláudio Castro’s resignation.

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