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11 dead as Brazilian police battle Red Command in Amazon region

FP Staff January 18, 2025, 00:53:53 IST

The wave of violence erupted after the murder of a military police officer on Sunday in the northwestern city of Porto Velho, a major state capital with one of the country’s highest homicide rates.

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Representational Image - Reuters
Representational Image - Reuters

At least 11 people have died during a week of clashes between Brazilian police and one of the nation’s most influential criminal organizations in the Amazon region, according to a government report.

The violence began after a military police officer was killed on Sunday in Porto Velho, a northwestern state capital known for its high homicide rate.

In retaliation, authorities initiated an operation targeting the Comando Vermelho (Red Command). This criminal group has expanded its reach from Rio de Janeiro to other parts of Brazil and beyond its borders.

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The Rondonia state security secretariat said in a report published Thursday that four people were killed in shootouts with police, and 14 people were arrested.

At least seven civilians were killed in retaliatory attacks on the population by Comando Vermelho, the report added.

Brazilian media reported that more than 20 buses and other vehicles had been set ablaze in the state.

Involved in extortion, drug trafficking and other criminal activities, Commando Vermelho has major influence in the Amazonas region.

Earlier in January, a Comando Vermelho boss was killed in a police operation in Porto Velho, local media reported.

Rondonia state forms part of the Brazilian Amazon, where murder rates are 41 percent higher than the national average, according to a study by the Brazilian Forum on Public Security (FBSP) released in December.

The NGO said that criminal gangs now operate in a third of Amazon municipalities – half of them under the control of Comando Vermelho.

Brazil’s other major criminal network, First Capital Command (PCC), is also present in the region, along with other smaller groups fighting for control in more than 80 municipalities.

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Organized crime in the Amazon is linked to drug trafficking, but also deforestation and other environmental crimes, said the FBSP.

With inputs from agencies

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