Protests erupt after police raid in Brazil leaves 119 dead and draws accusations of excessive force

Protests erupt after police raid in Brazil leaves 119 dead and draws accusations of excessive force
Complexo da Penha favela residents protest in front of the Guanabara Palace against a deadly police operation on alleged drug traffickers of the Comando Vermelho gang, in Rio de Janeiro, on Oct. 29, 2025. (AP Photo)
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Protests erupt after police raid in Brazil leaves 119 dead and draws accusations of excessive force

Protests erupt after police raid in Brazil leaves 119 dead and draws accusations of excessive force
  • Residents of low-income neighborhoods targetted in the raid accused police of "massacre"
  • Police lost four men what state Gov. Claudio Castro said was a war against “narco-terrorism”
  • Questions quickly arose about the death count and the state of the bodies, with reports of disfigurement and knife wounds

RIO DE JANEIRO: A massive police raid on a drug gang embedded in low-income neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro that left at least 119 people dead drew protests for excessive force Wednesday and calls for the Rio’s governor to resign.
Dozens of favelas residents gathered in front of the state’s government headquarters shouting “assassins!” and waving Brazilian flags stained with red paint, a day after Rio’s deadliest raid and hours after families and residents laid dozens of dead bodies on a street in one of the targeted communities to show the magnitude of the operation.
Questions quickly arose about the death count and the state of the bodies, with reports of disfigurement and knife wounds. Brazil’s Supreme Court, prosecutors and lawmakers asked Castro to provide detailed information about the operation.
“This was a massacre,” said Barbara Barbosa, a domestic worker from the Penha complex of favelas, one of the two huge communities targeted in the police operation. She said her son was killed in a prior operation in Penha.
“Do we have a death sentence? Stop killing us,” said activist Rute Sales, 56. Many residents came Penha in Rio’s poor, northern zone to the imposing Guanabara Palace on motorbikes.
The toll of 115 suspects and four policemen killed was an increase over what authorities originally said were 60 suspects dead in Tuesday’s raid by about 2,500 police and soldiers in the favelas of Penha and Complexo de Alemao.
Felipe Curi, Rio state police secretary, told a news conference that bodies of additional suspects were found in a wooded area where he said they had worn camouflage while battling with security forces. He said local residents had removed clothing and equipment from the bodies, in what would be investigated as evidence tampering.
“These individuals were in the woods, equipped with camouflage clothing, vests and weapons. Now many of them appeared wearing underwear or shorts, with no equipment, as if they had come through a portal and changed clothes,” Curi said.
Earlier Wednesday, in the neighborhood of Penha, residents had surrounded many of the bodies — collected in trucks and displayed in a main square — and shouted “massacre” and “justice” before forensic authorities arrived to retrieve the remains.
“They can take them to jail, why kill them like this? Lots of them were alive and calling for help,” resident Elisangela Silva Santos, 50, said during the gathering in Penha. “Yes they’re traffickers, but they’re human.”
The tally of suspects arrested stood at 113 — up from 81 cited previously, Curi said. The state government said some 90 rifles and more than a ton of drugs were seized.
Police and soldiers had launched the raid in helicopters, armored vehicles and on foot, targeting the Red Command gang. They drew gunfire and other retaliation from gang members, sparking scenes of chaos across the city on Tuesday. Schools in the affected areas shuttered, a local university canceled classes, and roads were blocked with buses used as barricades.
Many shops remained closed Wednesday morning in Penha, where local activist Raull Santiago said he was part of a team that found about 15 bodies before dawn.
“We saw executed people: shot in the back, shots to the head, stab wounds, people tied up. This level of brutality, the hatred that is spread — there’s no other way to describe it except as a massacre,” Santiago said.
Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes ordered Castro to provide information about the police operation and scheduled a hearing with the state governor and the heads of the military and civil police next Monday in Rio.
The Senate’s commission for human rights said it was asking for clarifications from the Rio state government. Meanwhile, Rio prosecutors requested that Castro provide detailed information about the operation and proof that there was no less harmful means of achieving its objectives.
And the federal public prosecutor’s office asked the Forensic Medical Institute to ensure that autopsy reports contain full descriptions and photographic and radiographic documentation of all injuries.
Castro said on Tuesday that Rio was at war against “narco-terrorism,” a term that echoed the Trump administration in its campaign against drug smuggling in Latin America.
On Wednesday, Castro called the operation a “success,” apart from the deaths of the four police officers.
Rio’s state government said that the suspects who had been killed had resisted police.
Rio has been the scene of lethal police raids for decades. In March 2005, some 29 people were killed in Rio’s Baixada Fluminense region, while in May 2021, 28 were killed in the Jacarezinho favela.
But the scale and lethality of Tuesday’s operation are unprecedented. Non-governmental organizations and the UN human rights body quickly raised concerns over the high number of reported fatalities and called for investigations.
“We fully understand the challenges of having to deal with violent and well-organized groups such as Red Command,” said UN Human Rights Spokesperson Marta Hurtado said.
But Brazil must “break this cycle of extreme brutality and ensure that law enforcement operations comply with international standards regarding the use of force,” she said, adding that the body was calling for full-fledged policing reform.
The operation’s stated objectives were capturing leaders and limiting the territorial expansion of the Red Command gang, which has increased its control over favelas in recent years.
Gang members allegedly targeted police with at least one drone. Rio de Janeiro’s state government shared a video on X of what appeared to show a drone firing a projectile from the sky.
Gov. Castro, from the conservative opposition Liberal Party, said Tuesday that Rio was “alone in this war.” He said the federal government should be providing more support to combat crime — in a swipe at the administration of leftist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
His comments were challenged by the Justice Ministry, which said it had responded to requests from Rio’s state government to deploy national forces in the state, renewing their presence 11 times.
Gleisi Hoffmann, the Lula administration’s liaison with the parliament, agreed that more coordinated action was needed but pointed to a recent crackdown on money laundering as an example of the federal government’s action on organized crime.
Justice Minister Ricardo Lewandowski said it was clearly an extremely bloody and violent operation.
“We should reflect on whether this kind of action is compatible with the Democratic Rule of Law that governs us all,” he told journalists on Wednesday.
Criminal gangs have expanded their presence across Brazil in recent years, including in the Amazon rainforest.
Roberto Uchôa, from the Brazilian Forum on Public Safety think-tank, said that criminal gangs have strengthened despite these kinds of operations, suggesting that they are inefficient.
“Killing more than 100 people like this won’t help decrease the Red Command’s expansion. The dead will soon be replaced,” Uchôa said.


Trump declares victory against climate ‘hoax’ after Bill Gates comments

Trump declares victory against climate ‘hoax’ after Bill Gates comments
Updated 6 min 18 sec ago

Trump declares victory against climate ‘hoax’ after Bill Gates comments

Trump declares victory against climate ‘hoax’ after Bill Gates comments
  • “Bill Gates has finally admitted that he was completely WRONG on the issue,”Trump said on his Truth Social platform
  • Microsoft co-founder Gateshas said climate change would have “serious” consequences on Earth but “will not lead to humanity’s demise”

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump claimed victory Wednesday over what he called the “hoax” of climate change, after billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates said a warming world would not end civilization.
“I (WE!) just won the War on the Climate Change Hoax. Bill Gates has finally admitted that he was completely WRONG on the issue,” Trump said on his Truth Social platform.
“It took courage to do so, and for that we are all grateful.”
Microsoft co-founder Gates said in a long memo this week that climate change “will not lead to humanity’s demise,” in what was seen as a major pivot by the 70-year-old.

 

Gates added that while climate change would have “serious” consequences, “people will be able to live and thrive in most places on Earth for the foreseeable future.”
He argued that tackling global disease and poverty would instead help prepare the planet’s poorest for a warming world.
Gates acknowledged that critics may charge him with hypocrisy because of his significant carbon footprint or argue the memo was a “sneaky way of arguing that we shouldn’t take climate change seriously.”
But he pointed to significant progress in cutting emissions to date, and said he was optimistic future technology would do so even more.
Trump has been a long-term skeptic on environmental issues and trashed climate change as the “greatest con job ever” in an address to the UN General Assembly in September.
The Republican has rolled back green policies since returning to power in January, following a victorious 2024 election campaign that received hundreds of millions of dollars on donations from Big Oil.


 


Climate inaction causing ‘millions’ of avoidable deaths: study

Climate inaction causing ‘millions’ of avoidable deaths: study
Updated 29 October 2025

Climate inaction causing ‘millions’ of avoidable deaths: study

Climate inaction causing ‘millions’ of avoidable deaths: study
  • “Climate change is increasingly destabilising the planetary systems and environmental conditions on which human life depends,” the study said

PARIS: Climate change is ravaging the health of people around the world and policy failures are leading to “millions” of avoidable deaths each year, an international team of experts said Wednesday.

Opportunities for a “just” climate transition were still on the table but remained “largely untapped,” according to the Lancet’s Countdown, a major annual study tracking the health impacts of climate change.

The report put figures on some of the most deadly consequences: 546,000 people died each year between 2012 and 2021 because of exposure to heat, a massive increase on figures from the 1990s; and toxic fumes from wildfires killed a record 154,000 last year.

The health journal’s report, released shortly before the UN COP30 climate talks in Brazil, called for increased investment in zero-carbon energy and climate-resilient infrastructure, and better planning for health challenges.

The authors were fiercely critical of US President Donald Trump’s decision to pull his country away from international aid programs and climate initiatives — with his policies then parroted by some other countries.

“Reversing these harmful policies and progressing meaningful climate change action is now crucial to protect people’s health and survival,” the report said.

With global temperatures in 2024 the hottest on record, going above 1.5C relative to the pre-industrial period for the first time, the experts listed the many health threats coming from heatwaves, droughts, heavy rain and other climate-related phenomena.

“Climate change is increasingly destabilising the planetary systems and environmental conditions on which human life depends,” the study said.

Fossil fuel-related air pollution caused more than 2.5 million deaths in 2022 alone, the authors said, slamming the practice of subsidising fossil fuels.

Governments lavished more than $950 billion on fossil fuel subsidies in 2023, the report said, highlighting six countries as the worst offenders: Russia, Iran, Japan, Germany, and China.

The figure was down on the 2022 record of $1.4 trillion, when European governments in particular scrambled to control energy costs after Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine helped cause a price spike.

More generally the authors accused corporations, “key decision-makers” and world leaders of “backsliding” on their climate commitments, hailing local actors and community groups for filling the leadership vacuum.


Ukraine detains ex-powergrid chief on fraud suspicion

Ukraine detains ex-powergrid chief on fraud suspicion
Updated 29 October 2025

Ukraine detains ex-powergrid chief on fraud suspicion

Ukraine detains ex-powergrid chief on fraud suspicion
  • Kudrytsky is accused of misappropriating over $1.6m of state funds in 2018, the prosecutors said
  • He will spend two months in pre-trial detention unless he comes up with a $300,000 bail

KYIV: A former Ukrainian state energy operator chief suspected of embezzlement was ordered to be kept in detention by a Kyiv court Wednesday, stoking fears of political interference as the country enters its fourth war winter.
The ruling comes months after President Volodymyr Zelensky failed to curb the power of anti-corruption agencies, with critics saying the government may resort to more covert means of exerting pressure on political opponents.
Volodymyr Kudrytsky, a former head of Ukraine’s state energy company Ukrenergo, who had been sacked last year, is accused of misappropriating over $1.6 million of state funds in 2018, the prosecutors said.
The Pechersk District court in Kyiv on Wednesday ruled “to apply to Volodymyr Dmytrovych Kudrytsky ... a preventive measure in the form of detention,” a judge said.
He will spend two months in pre-trial detention unless he comes up with a $300,000 bail.
Kudrytsky called the ruling “absurd and unfounded,” according to the Ukrainska Pravda newspaper.
Head of Ukraine’s parliament anti-corruption committee Anastasia Radina said on social media that “as of now, the case appears to be nothing more than pressure” against Kudrytsky.
According to Ukrainian media, Radina and a few other lawmakers said they were ready to guarantee Kudrytsky’s bail.
Kudrytsky had overseen Ukraine’s electricity grid since 2020, including in the crucial years of the Russian invasion that has put the country’s energy infrastructure under immense pressure.
But he was suddenly dismissed last year in a move denounced as politically motivated by some members of the company’s board.
This year’s Russian campaign against Ukrainian energy infrastructure is especially harsh, with media reporting that strikes maybe halted 60 percent of Kyiv’s natural gas production, a predominant fuel for heating in the country.


Spain holds memorial ceremony for flood victims a year after disaster killed over 230 people

Spain holds memorial ceremony for flood victims a year after disaster killed over 230 people
Updated 29 October 2025

Spain holds memorial ceremony for flood victims a year after disaster killed over 230 people

Spain holds memorial ceremony for flood victims a year after disaster killed over 230 people
  • The ceremony was held at a public museum in Valencia city
  • Mazón has been heavily criticized for his administration’s slow response to the floods

VALENCIA: Spain commemorated Wednesday the anniversary of last year’s massive floods that killed over 230 people with a national memorial ceremony led by King Felipe VI.
The Spanish King spoke along with three family members of victims who lost their lives when torrential rains flooded large parts of eastern Spain on the evening of Oct. 29, 2024.
The downpour quickly filled normally dry gorges and riverbeds. Rushing waters overflowed their banks, sweeping away cars and destroying homes. There are 237 confirmed deaths, with 229 victims from the eastern Valencia region, according to the central government.
It was one of Europe’s worst natural disasters in living memory. Experts and the government said it was a sign of the dangers of climate change that is driving extreme weather events around the world.
The ceremony was held at a public museum in Valencia city, whose southern neighborhoods and adjoining towns were devastated. Cleanup efforts initially led by thousands of residents and volunteers took weeks to scoop up the layers of mud and debris.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, representatives from Spain’s other regions and families of the deceased also attended.
Valencia’s regional president, Carlos Mazón, was jeered and insulted by several family members of victims before the ceremony started.
Mazón has been heavily criticized for his administration’s slow response to the floods. There have been several large street protests calling for Mazón to step down, and the latest one drew tens of thousands of demonstrators a few days before the funeral. Mazón has clung to power nonetheless even though his management of the flooding remains a drag on the prospects of his center-right Popular Party.
Mazón, King Felipe and Sánchez were pelted with mud when the three made their first joint visit last year to the disaster zone with many people still missing and neighborhoods without power and covered in mire. The king has since made several visits to the area and been well received.


A man who spent 43 years in prison before his conviction was overturned now faces deportation

A man who spent 43 years in prison before his conviction was overturned now faces deportation
Updated 29 October 2025

A man who spent 43 years in prison before his conviction was overturned now faces deportation

A man who spent 43 years in prison before his conviction was overturned now faces deportation
  • As his sister prepared to bring him home on Oct. 3, the thin, white-haired Vedam was instead taken into federal custody over a 1999 deportation order
  • “He was someone who’s suffered a profound injustice,” said immigration lawyer Ava Benach

PHILADELPHIA: After waiting more than four decades to clear his name in a friend’s 1980 killing, Subramanyam Vedam was set to walk free from a Pennsylvania prison this month.
Vedam and Thomas Kinser were the 19-year-old children of Penn State University faculty. Vedam was the last person seen with Kinser and was twice convicted of killing him, despite a lack of witnesses or motive.
In August, a judge threw out the conviction after Vedam’s lawyers found new ballistics evidence that prosecutors had never disclosed.
As his sister prepared to bring him home on Oct. 3, the thin, white-haired Vedam was instead taken into federal custody over a 1999 deportation order. The 64-year-old, who legally came to the US from India when he was 9 months old, now faces another daunting legal fight.
Amid the Trump Administration’s focus on mass deportations, Vedam’s lawyers must persuade an immigration court that a 1980s drug conviction should be outweighed by the years he wrongly spent in prison. For a time, immigration law allowed people who had reformed their lives to seek such waivers. Vedam never pursued it then because of the murder conviction.
“He was someone who’s suffered a profound injustice,” said immigration lawyer Ava Benach. “(And) those 43 years aren’t a blank slate. He lived a remarkable experience in prison.”
Vedam earned several degrees behind bars, tutored hundreds of fellow inmates and went nearly half a century with just a single infraction, involving rice brought in from the outside.
His lawyers hope immigration judges will consider the totality of his case. The administration, in a brief filed Friday, opposes the effort. So, Vedam remains at an 1,800-bed US Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in central Pennsylvania.
“Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S,” a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said in an email about the case.
‘Mr. Vedam, where were you born?’
After his initial conviction was thrown out, Vedam faced an unusual set of questions at his 1988 retrial.
“Mr. Vedam, where were you born?” Center County District Attorney Ray Gricar asked. “How frequently would you go back to India?
“During your teenage years, did you ever get into meditation?”
Gopal Balachandran, the Penn State law professor who won the reversal, believes the questions were designed to alienate him from the all-white jury, which returned a second guilty verdict.
The Vedams were among the first Indian families in the area known as “Happy Valley,” where his father had come as a postdoctoral fellow in 1956. An older daughter was born in State College, but “Subu,” as he was known, was born when the family was back in India in 1961.
They returned to State College for good before his first birthday, and became the family that welcomed new members of the Indian diaspora to town.
“They were fully engaged. My father loved the university. My mother was a librarian, and she helped start the library,” said the sister, Saraswathi Vedam, 68, a midwifery professor in Vancouver, British Columbia.
While she left for college in Massachusetts, Subu became swept up in the counterculture of the late 1970s, growing his hair long and dabbling in drugs while taking classes at Penn State.
One day in December 1980, Vedem asked Kinser for a ride to nearby Lewisburg to buy drugs. Kinser was never seen again, although his van was found outside his apartment. Nine months later, hikers found his body in a wooded area miles away.
Vedam was detained on drug charges while police investigated, and was ultimately charged with murder. He was convicted in 1983 and sentenced to life without parole. To resolve the drug case, he pleaded no contest to four counts of selling LSD and a theft charge. The 1988 retrial offered no reprieve from his situation.
Although the defense long questioned the ballistics evidence in the case, the jury, which heard that Vedam had bought a .25-caliber gun from someone, never heard that an FBI report suggested the bullet wound was too small to have been fired from that gun. Balachandran only found that report as he dug into the case in 2023.
After hearings on the issue, a Center County judge threw out the conviction and the district attorney decided this month not to retry the case.
Trump officials oppose the petition
Benach, the immigration lawyer, often represents clients trying to stay in the US despite an earlier infraction. Still, she finds the Vedam case “truly extraordinary” given the constitutional violations involved.
“Forty-three years of wrongful imprisonment more than makes up for the possession with intent to distribute LSD when he was 20 years old,” she said.
Vedam could spend several more months in custody before the Board of Immigration Appeals decides whether to reopen the case. ICE officials, in a brief Friday, said the clock ran out years ago.
“He has provided no evidence nor argument to show he has been diligent in pursuing his rights as it pertains to his immigration status,” Katherine B. Frisch, an assistant chief counsel, wrote.
Saraswathi Vedam is saddened by the latest delay, but said her brother remains patient.
“He, more than anybody else, knows that sometimes things don’t make sense,” she said. “You have to just stay the course and keep hoping that truth and justice and compassion and kindness will win.”