Sí£o Paulo, Brazil, Refuses Federal Help After Gang Attacks Leaving 9 Dead

Gang violence that is terrorizing São Paulo, Brazil’s biggest and richest state, may require emergency measures from the federal government, but local authorities must request help, signaled Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

Over 70 coordinated attacks Wednesday, July 12, on police stations, buses and buildings killed at least nine people in São Paulo state. The most part of attacks occurred in early morning, but continued during the day with less intensity.

Still in the morning President Lula da Silva said measures are needed to prevent attacks against common citizens, government staff and public and private property.

"We must take measures," he said following what seems a resumption of a new offensive against the police by members of a prison-based gang.

"The bandits are provoking the police, terrorizing civil society, and we must react within the frame of the law, but we need to agree with the São Paulo authorities".

A police officer and his sister were among those slain in a score of coordinated pre-dawn attacks. Also killed were two security guards.

Wednesday’s assaults were presumed to have been launched by members of the First Capital Command (PCC), a ruthless prison-based gang that controls drug and weapons trafficking in the slums of São Paulo and other cities.

The new attacks came two months after the organization launched a big offensive, which included some 300 attacks on police stations, buses and businesses that left more than 130 people dead.

Among those killed in May were 41 policemen and prison guards, four civilians and 79 people authorities described as "suspected" gangsters.

Local and international human rights organizations decried what they said were rampant abuses by vengeance-seeking police during that crackdown, including the summary execution of suspects.

This Wednesday, July 12, attackers caused extensive damage burning down at least 18 buses in several cities and firing homemade bombs and Molotov cocktails at two supermarkets, a bank branch and two used-car lots.

At least three police stations and two Military Police posts were also targeted, it was officially reported in São Paulo.

The attacks came just hours after authorities announced the arrest of Emivaldo Silva Santos, a reputed PCC kingpin in the industrial zone known as ABC Paulista.

Mercopress – www.mercopress.com

Tags:

You May Also Like

Good Political and Economic News in Brazil Helps Drag Market Up

Latin American markets were mixed, with Brazilian stocks edging up amid conflicting signals on ...

Exports Help Brazil’s Petrobras Reach New Record High

Petrobras, the state-controlled Brazilian oil company, hit a record high oil processing level in ...

Brazil’s MST Calls for an End to Career Politicians

The political and social crisis that Brazil is facing is an opportunity for activists ...

Brazil's Amazon Secrets

Brazil’s Cosmetic Industry to Get US$ 4.4 Million in Italian Deals

Close to 20 companies from Brazil exhibiting at Cosmoprof Bologna, in Italy, between Mach ...

The World Is in Need of a Hague Tribunal for Crimes Against the Economy

Younger people find it strange that the Vietnam War has so much importance in ...

Nigeria Wants Brazil-Africa Summit

Nigeria’s President, Olosegum Obasanjo, asked for President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s support for ...

Brazil Lula’s Refusal of a Third Term Sends Message to Caudillo Chávez

With the Brazilian presidential election approaching in October 2010, potential candidates have started to ...

Brazilian Indians Destroy Dam Equipment to Save River They Depend On

Brazilian Indians from the Enawenê Nawê tribe in Brazil's Amazon occupied and shut down ...

Lula’s Life Becomes a Super-Production Movie Premiering this January 1st

The story of a former lathe operator who became union leader and for three ...

Brazil President Meets with Plaza de Mayo Mothers in Buenos Aires

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff in her first overseas trip as chief of state ratified ...