The UN Human Rights Council has scheduled its next review for August 2026 of Rio de Janeiro's Operation Contenção—a deadly October 2025 police action in Complexo da Penha that killed over 120 people—and the city's broader public security policies. The decision cites rising police fatalities and alleged human rights violations, with UN experts maintaining deep concern.
This week, the UN Human Rights Council opted to continue scrutinizing Rio de Janeiro's public security policies and Operation Contenção, the October 2025 operation in Complexo da Penha that became Brazil's deadliest recorded police action, resulting in at least 121-122 deaths including several officers. The next session is set for August 10-14 at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.
The Working Group on Communications declined to close the case. In August, it could end proceedings, seek more data from Brazil, or escalate to the Working Group on Situations for broader Council attention.
Factors included a 44% rise in on-duty police deaths in 2025, with Rio responsible for over half nationwide. UN experts had previously voiced 'deep concern' over reports of executions, warrantless invasions, and excessive force, urging independent probes and protections for witnesses and families.
UN-appointed lawyer Raphael Costa, from Niterói and a former Ministry of Justice coordinator, has until May 19 to compile depositions and an updated report.
Escalation to the Working Group on Situations would highlight patterns of violations, potentially requiring formal Brazilian responses under international treaties and impacting partnerships like Governor Cláudio Castro's (PL) November 2025 UN-Habitat deal on climate resilience.