Agostina Páez, a 29-year-old Argentine lawyer from Santiago del Estero, has been detained in Rio de Janeiro after being reported for racist gestures and remarks at an Ipanema bar. Brazilian authorities seized her passport and will fit her with an electronic ankle monitor to prevent her from leaving the country during the investigation. Páez expressed regret and fear over the threats she is receiving.
The incident took place during a vacation in Brazil, where Páez was with a group of friends. According to her account in an interview with the newspaper El Liberal, the trouble began as they were leaving a nightclub in Ipanema. 'We paid for the entry and everything we consumed. When we were about to leave, they held us and said that with the bracelet there were things we hadn't paid for. We had paid everything at the time. I have the receipts, with the times and everything,' Páez explained. Tensions rose when she and her friends accused the staff of theft, and they responded with laughter. As they left the venue, employees followed them down the stairs making obscene gestures, such as grabbing their genitals and pointing at them. In response, Páez made a gesture captured by security cameras and reported as racist; she is accused of using the word 'mono' (monkey), a discriminatory insult in Brazil toward people of African or indigenous origin, though she insists it was not directed at them: 'The gestures were more for my friends' and 'I didn't mean to make the signs at them directly'.The case is being handled by the 11th Police Delegation of Rocinha in Rio de Janeiro. Páez, 29 years old, has had her passport seized and will be fitted with an electronic ankle monitor next week to prevent her from fleeing during the judicial process. 'I'm sorry and scared to death,' she confessed, adding that she is 'locked in an apartment' out of fear of media exposure in Brazil. 'I'm receiving tons of threats. I closed my accounts. I'm literally scared to death,' she recounted. She acknowledged that her reaction was 'the worst' and stated: 'Obviously it was the worst reaction. I'm very sorry' and 'I shouldn't have reacted that way'.The event has reignited discussions on racism and legal accountability in tourist settings, highlighting cultural differences and sensitivities to discriminatory insults in Brazil. Páez, a lawyer by profession, faces a process that could have significant implications for her personal and professional life.