Brazilian Police 13 Times More Likely to Be Killed than a Common Citizen

The president of the Rio de Janeiro Association of Military Police, Mequisedec Nascimento, plans to ask the Organization of American States (OAS) to issue a citation to the Brazilian government on the deaths of military policemen.

He will base his request on a Fiocruz study showing that the mortality rate among the Rio Military Police, which has more than 40 thousand members, is 13 times greater than that of the Brazilian population in general and 7 times greater than that of the residents of the city of Rio de Janeiro.

The Association hopes that, through this measure, the OAS will induce Brazil to take steps to reduce the mortality rate among members of the Military Police.

On the other hand the Brazilian police is often criticized for its violence. One of the main criticisms of Brazil appearing in the Amnesty International Report 2006 has to do with abuses, such as torture, mistreatment, and assassination, committed by the Brazilian police.

According to Amnesty, Federal and state police officers were involved in criminal and corrupt activities, as well as in murders committed by the so-called "death squad," which the international human rights organization says includes both active and retired police officers.

According to the report, records show that the police killed nine thousand people between 1999 and 2004.

"The investigation of these homicides remains minimal," the text states. The document underscores the campaign against torture launched by the federal government in December. Nevertheless, Amnesty says that in 2005 it received information about torture in juvenile detention centers administered by the São Paulo State Youth Welfare Foundation (FEBEM).

The international human rights organization also emphasizes the awful conditions in prisons when it comes to sanitary facilities and the lack of medical services. These conditions favor the outbreak of riots and the high degree of violence among inmates.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Gil, Brazilian Composer and Minister, Gets Creation Prize in Spain

Brazil’s Minister of Culture, Gilberto Gil – as both singer and composer – is ...

US Bank Morgan Stanley Warns Brazil Growth Might Be Close to Zero

Brazil's economy could suffer a contraction during two consecutive quarters at the end of ...

Brazil Thanks Chile for Taking In Political Refugees During the Dictatorship

The inauguration of the new President of Chile, Michelle Bachelet, is a signal of ...

Mining in Brazil

Lula Ally Opposes Government Bill Regulating Mining in Indian Land

Senator Tião Viana (Workers' Party, state of Acre), the vice-president of the Senate, declared ...

Stop Shaking, Rio’s Trafficker Tells Foreign Reporter, You’d Be Dead If We Wanted

The correspondent of Spain's daily El Paí­s, Francho Barón, was attacked and threatened in ...

3.2 Million Foreigners Visit Brazil in First Half, a 2.7% Boost

In the first half of the year, 3,205,562 people arrived in Brazil on international ...

Lula Tells Peres Why Brazil Talks to Iran and Is Invited to Turn On Middle East Lights

Talking to journalists in Brazilian capital BrasÀ­lia and standing close to Israeli president Shimon ...

Brazil’s Lula Hoping to Meet Old Friend Fidel During Visit to Havana

Cuban leader Fidel Castro and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva might get ...

Pretty Woman, 30, Paid to Be Killed, Say Brazilian Police

The police of Fortaleza, the capital city of the northeastern state of Ceará, in ...

Brazil’s Furniture Industry Counting on Strong Dollar to Weather Crisis

To invest in design and new markets is the best strategy for furniture producers ...