Brazilian right-wing governors at a Rio de Janeiro press conference announcing the Peace Consortium after a deadly police operation, with one participant joining remotely via video.
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Right-wing governors create peace consortium after lethal rio operation

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Right-wing governors met in Rio de Janeiro on October 30, 2025, to support the police operation against Comando Vermelho that left 121 dead in the Alemão and Penha complexes. They announced the creation of the 'Peace Consortium' to integrate public security actions and criticized the federal government. São Paulo Governor Tarcísio de Freitas joined remotely and advocated classifying factions as terrorists.

The mega police operation, launched on October 28, 2025, in the Alemão and Penha complexes in Rio de Janeiro, resulted in 121 deaths, including four police officers—two civilians and two military—113 arrests, and the seizure of 118 weapons, according to the official tally from the state government. The action, involving around 2,500 Civil and Military Police agents, targeted Comando Vermelho members and was praised by Governor Cláudio Castro (PL) as a 'success' despite the losses.

In a meeting at Palácio Guanabara on October 30, right-wing governors, including Castro, Romeu Zema (Novo, MG), Ronaldo Caiado (União Brasil, GO), Jorginho Mello (PL, SC), Eduardo Riedel (PP, MS), and Celina Leão (PP, DF deputy), announced the 'Peace Consortium'. The group aims to share intelligence, equipment, and experiences to fight organized crime, with initial headquarters in Rio. São Paulo Governor Tarcísio de Freitas (Republicanos) joined via video call, mourning the police deaths and offering São Paulo's support. 'The state of Rio de Janeiro acted very well, made a difference,' he said.

The governors attacked the Lula (PT) government, with Zema stating: 'We have a president who goes abroad to organize peace in Ukraine, but leaves the people dying here.' Caiado called the Public Security PEC 'fake' and linked the left to leniency toward crime. Tarcísio advocated a bill to equate factions with terrorists: 'There will be no strong country when organized crime is governing.' The federal government responded by sending 30 PF and National Force experts, plus 350 PRF agents, as the first measure of an emergency office.

Controversies include allegations of torture, lack of aid, and body removals by residents, with Secretary Felipe Curi questioning additional injuries during retrieval. Families of victims from other states face difficulties in identification at the IML.

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Protesters in Rio de Janeiro demonstrate against a deadly police operation that killed 121 people, holding signs and flags in a tense urban street scene.
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Rio police operation kills 121 and sparks protests and international criticism

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A major police operation in Rio de Janeiro, launched on October 28, 2025, against the Comando Vermelho in the Penha and Alemão complexes, resulted in 121 deaths, making it the deadliest in Brazilian history. Governor Cláudio Castro defended the action as a victory, but relatives and activists protested what they call a massacre, while UN experts demanded an independent investigation. The federal government responded with an emergency office to combat organized crime.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva sent the anti-faction bill to Congress on Friday (31), accelerated in response to a major police operation in Rio de Janeiro that resulted in 121 deaths. The proposal toughens penalties against organized crime and creates mechanisms to financially combat factions. Experts debate whether the text represents progress or repeats ineffective punitive formulas.

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The federal police issued a statement criticizing deputy guilherme derrite's changes to the anti-faction bill, stating they weaken the fight against organized crime. Chamber president hugo motta mediated talks to preserve pf's roles. The lula government views the alterations as an attack on the agency and seeks to delay the vote.

São Paulo's Public Security Secretariat released 2025 data showing 834 deaths by police, with the fourth quarter recording 276 victims, the highest since 2015. While homicides fell 4% statewide to 2,527, the capital saw a 6% rise to 530 cases. Experts criticize the rising lethality trend under Governor Tarcísio de Freitas's administration.

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The Supreme Federal Court upheld house arrests for ten defendants convicted in the coup plot, following a custody hearing on Saturday, December 27. The measure, authorized by Minister Alexandre de Moraes, aims to prevent escapes like those of Silvinei Vasques and Alexandre Ramagem. Two targets were not immediately located by the Federal Police.

One week after the US capture of Nicolás Maduro, Brazil's PT has intensified attacks on the right-wing opposition, accusing them of supporting foreign interventions, while exposing internal party rifts over the chavista regime. Experts see minimal disruption to regional drug trafficking from the event.

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Police Military cabo Fabrício Gomes de Santana, 40, vanished on the night of January 7, 2026, in São Paulo after an argument over an arm-wrestling bet. His car was found burned the next day, and searches now involve divers in the Guarapiranga reservoir. Three suspects have been arrested in connection with the case.

 

 

 

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