A massive police and military raid in the Vila Cruzeiro favela complex of Rio de Janeiro resulted in a staggering death toll of over 100 people, including four police officers, making it the deadliest police operation in Rio’s history. The raid, code-named “Operation Containment”, targeted the notorious Red Command criminal organization. The death toll immediately sparked massive public outrage and protests in Vila Cruzeiro and surrounding favelas, with residents laying out dozens of corpses in public spaces and claiming the operation involved extrajudicial killings and torture, including reports of decapitation.
The fury of the protesters, who wore white for peace and held signs demanding “stop killing us”, was primarily directed at Rio state Governor Cláudio Castro, with demonstrators and local council members explicitly demanding his resignation. While Castro defended the operation as a necessary “success” against “narco-terrorism,” the unprecedented scale of the violence led to immediate and intense scrutiny from judicial and human rights bodies.Brazil’s Supreme Court, federal prosecutors, and lawmakers ordered Governor Castro to provide detailed information and justification for the operation’s high lethality. International bodies, including the UN Human Rights Spokesperson, condemned the brutality and urged Brazil to break the cycle of extreme police violence by implementing full policing reform that complies with international standards on the use of force. Critics argue that such lethal operations fail to address the root causes of organized crime and only result in the easily replaceable deaths of low-ranking members.



