A Rio policewoman made a gruesome discovery outside her home on Tuesday: a backpack containing the head of her husband who had been kidnapped overnight, police said.
The victim, a 35-year-old shopkeeper and former footballer, was abducted outside his shop near Rio’s Minha Deusa shantytown and whisked away in his own car by unidentified assailants.
Police said the policewoman ventured outside her home early on Tuesday and recognized her husband’s backpack.
“She opened the backpack and inside was the head,” they said.
According to the G1 news Web site, the eyes and the tongue of the victim had been plucked out and police believe a local drug gang may be responsible.
The policewoman belongs to one of the city’s Police Pacification Units (UPPS) set up in 2008 to occupy and impose order in favelas.
Brazilian authorities are battling to reassert control in lawless areas ahead of the next year’s World Cup, after evicting the drug traffickers who had previously held sway.
It was the second bloody incident in a few days in the area, where seven people were gunned down on Thursday last week in what police also believe may have been gang-related violence.
Despite the deployment of the UPPs, violence often flares in the favelas and is sometimes blamed on police. In Rocinha, Rio’s biggest favela, 25 members of the local UPP were recently jailed for roles in the torture and killing of construction worker Amarildo de Souza in July and for trying to blame traffickers.
Several protest s have since been held across Rio to demand “Where is Amarildo?”
These frequently end in clashes with police.
Heavy rain and strong winds yesterday disrupted flights, trains and ferries, forcing the closure of roads across large parts of New Zealand’s North Island, while snapping power links to tens of thousands. Domestic media reported a few flights had resumed operating by afternoon from the airport in Wellington, the capital, although cancelations were still widespread after airport authorities said most morning flights were disrupted. Air New Zealand said it hoped to resume services when conditions ease later yesterday, after it paused operations at Wellington, Napier and Palmerston North airports. Online images showed flooded semi-rural neighborhoods, inundated homes, trees fallen on vehicles and collapsed
FRAYED: Strains between the US-European ties have ruptured allies’ trust in Washington, but with time, that could be rebuilt, the Michigan governor said China is providing crucial support for Russia’s aggression in Ukraine and could end the war with a phone call, US Ambassador to NATO Matthew Whitaker said. “China could call [Russian President] Vladimir Putin and end this war tomorrow and cut off his dual-purpose technologies that they’re selling,” Whitaker said during a Friday panel at the Munich Security Conference. “China could stop buying Russian oil and gas.” “You know, this war is being completely enabled by China,” the US envoy added. Beijing and Moscow have forged an even tighter partnership since the start of the war, and Russia relies on China for critical parts
Two sitting Philippine senators have been identified as “coperpetrators” in former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte’s crimes against humanity trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC), documents released by prosecutors showed. Philippine senators Ronald Dela Rosa and Christopher Go are among eight current and former officials named in a document dated Feb. 13 and posted to the court’s Web site. ICC prosecutors have charged Duterte with three counts of crimes against humanity, alleging his involvement in at least 76 murders as part of his “war on drugs.” “Duterte and his coperpetrators shared a common plan or agreement to ‘neutralize’ alleged criminals in the Philippines
In a softly lit Shanghai bar, graduate student Helen Zhao stretched out both wrists to have her pulse taken — the first step to ordering the house special, a bespoke “health” cocktail based on traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). “TCM bars” have popped up in several cities across China, epitomizing what the country’s stressed-out, time-poor youth refer to as “punk wellness,” or “wrecking yourself while saving yourself.” At Shanghai’s Niang Qing, a TCM doctor in a white coat diagnoses customers’ physical conditions based on the pulse readings, before a mixologist crafts custom drinks incorporating the herbs and roots prescribed for their ailments.