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DUKAS_136519478_EYE
Battle-scarred ghost town bears mute witness to Mexico’s drug wars. The army has reclaimed the village school that became a battlefield but few believe gangs’ bloody reign has ended
Those who knew El Limoncito remember a welcoming and industrious community of lime farmers who poured their sweat into the soils of Mexico’s sun-baked backlands in search of a better life. Then the drug conflict exploded and everything changed. The village’s primary school found itself on the frontline of a six-hour Monday morning gunfight that sparked a ferocious two-year struggle for control of the area. As gunmen from two rival cartels – armed with .50-calibre sniper rifles and improvised tanks – fought pitched battles for El Limoncito’s dusty streets, locals fled, leaving behind everything they had. “It was all-out war,” remembered one former resident, who asked not to be named for fear of being killed. El Limoncito’s deserted schoolhouse became a base for fighters from one of the warring factions – then a blood-spattered graveyard after their enemies stormed its classrooms in an attempt to retake the village. Family homes became makeshift forts used to spray invaders with gunfire. The pale yellow chapel was peppered with bullets and robbed of its flock.Residents from Tancitaro during February 14 in a regional party in the municipality of Tancitaro, Mexico. Tancitaro is known for providing the biggest avocado production in Michoacan state.
© Emilio Espejel / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_136519449_EYE
Battle-scarred ghost town bears mute witness to Mexico’s drug wars. The army has reclaimed the village school that became a battlefield but few believe gangs’ bloody reign has ended
Those who knew El Limoncito remember a welcoming and industrious community of lime farmers who poured their sweat into the soils of Mexico’s sun-baked backlands in search of a better life. Then the drug conflict exploded and everything changed. The village’s primary school found itself on the frontline of a six-hour Monday morning gunfight that sparked a ferocious two-year struggle for control of the area. As gunmen from two rival cartels – armed with .50-calibre sniper rifles and improvised tanks – fought pitched battles for El Limoncito’s dusty streets, locals fled, leaving behind everything they had. “It was all-out war,” remembered one former resident, who asked not to be named for fear of being killed. El Limoncito’s deserted schoolhouse became a base for fighters from one of the warring factions – then a blood-spattered graveyard after their enemies stormed its classrooms in an attempt to retake the village. Family homes became makeshift forts used to spray invaders with gunfire. The pale yellow chapel was peppered with bullets and robbed of its flock.A man wears a pistol chain during February 14 in a regional party in the municipality of Tancitaro, Mexico. Tancitaro is known for providing the biggest avocado production in Michoacan state.
© Emilio Espejel / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_136519424_EYE
Battle-scarred ghost town bears mute witness to Mexico’s drug wars. The army has reclaimed the village school that became a battlefield but few believe gangs’ bloody reign has ended
Those who knew El Limoncito remember a welcoming and industrious community of lime farmers who poured their sweat into the soils of Mexico’s sun-baked backlands in search of a better life. Then the drug conflict exploded and everything changed. The village’s primary school found itself on the frontline of a six-hour Monday morning gunfight that sparked a ferocious two-year struggle for control of the area. As gunmen from two rival cartels – armed with .50-calibre sniper rifles and improvised tanks – fought pitched battles for El Limoncito’s dusty streets, locals fled, leaving behind everything they had. “It was all-out war,” remembered one former resident, who asked not to be named for fear of being killed. El Limoncito’s deserted schoolhouse became a base for fighters from one of the warring factions – then a blood-spattered graveyard after their enemies stormed its classrooms in an attempt to retake the village. Family homes became makeshift forts used to spray invaders with gunfire. The pale yellow chapel was peppered with bullets and robbed of its flock.Hipo?lito Mora, a lime farmer who became famous for leading a paramilitary uprising against drug cartels in west Mexico nearly a decade ago, says he believes the security situation is even worse there today as organized crime groups struggle for control. Photograph by: Emiliano Espejel / The Guardian
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DUKAS_127875336_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
The unfinished house of a Camorra boss in Castel Volturno, a city about 50 kilometres north of Naples. About 24,000 illegal constructions have been built on this coast with the support of mobsters
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DUKAS_127875522_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
One of the 24.000 illegal buildings erected on the coast of Castel Volturno. Most of these houses were built with the support of the Mafia bosses. The Camorra, the neapolitan Mafia, had taken over the sand quarries in the area with which they produced cement. If you wanted to build an illegal house here, you had to buy Camorra cement, you had to use workers from companies linked to the Camorra.
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DUKAS_127875379_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
One of the thousands of illegal villas built on the shore of Castel Volturno with the alleged support of the Camorra. Many of them have been confiscated or seized and others have succumbed to neglect, whose ruins are spread over 27 kilometres of beach like archaeological artifacts from a post-apocalypse disaster.
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DUKAS_127875378_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
The dilapidated house of a Camorra mobster in Castel Volturno, a city about 50 kilometres north of Naples. About 24,000 illegal constructions have been built on this coast. Thousands have been confiscated or seized and others, like this one, have succumbed to neglect.
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_127875525_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
The dilapidated house of a Camorra mobster in Castel Volturno, a city about 50 kilometres north of Naples. About 24,000 illegal constructions have been built on this coast. Thousands have been confiscated or seized and others, like this one, have succumbed to neglect.
© Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127875454_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
The dilapidated house of a Camorra mobster in Castel Volturno, a city about 50 kilometres north of Naples. About 24,000 illegal constructions have been built on this coast. Thousands have been confiscated or seized and others, like this one, have succumbed to neglect.
© Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_127875449_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
Vegetation taking over an abandoned villa owned by a Camorra boss in Castel Volturno. Like many others, the building has been confiscated and eventually succumbed to neglect.
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
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DUKAS_127875534_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
A house confiscated from a boss of the Ndrangheta, near Filandari, in Calabria. Bosses of the Calabrian Mafia, don't flaunt their symbolic power by building enormous villas. The ÕNdrangheta knows well that an exquisite home or an imposing villa generates envy, a sentiment that Calabrian bosses want to avoid spreading within the general population.
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DUKAS_127875335_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
At the end of the 1970s, the Mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Òthe PopeÓ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizza Sella,a splendid cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates over the city. When the authorities began to investigate the corrupt building scheme, it was already too late. Half of them had been completed, and the other half remained unfinished. Today Pizzo Sella, which has gone down in history as the Òhill of dishonourÓ, is an ancestral place straight out of a horror film: the rotting skeletons of 170 villas, some of which confiscated by the authorities, but never razed, serve as shelters for birds and rats and have become an open-air rubbish heap.
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DUKAS_127875508_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
At the end of the 1970s, the Mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Òthe PopeÓ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizza Sella,a splendid cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates over the city. When the authorities began to investigate the corrupt building scheme, it was already too late. Half of them had been completed, and the other half remained unfinished. Today Pizzo Sella, which has gone down in history as the Òhill of dishonourÓ, is an ancestral place straight out of a horror film: the rotting skeletons of 170 villas, some of which confiscated by the authorities, but never razed, serve as shelters for birds and rats and have become an open-air rubbish heap.
© Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127875435_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the Mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Òthe PopeÓ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizza Sella,a splendid cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates over the city. When the authorities began to investigate the corrupt building scheme, it was already too late. Half of them had been completed, and the other half remained unfinished. Today Pizzo Sella, which has gone down in history as the Òhill of dishonourÓ, is an ancestral place straight out of a horror film: the rotting skeletons of 170 villas, some of which confiscated by the authorities, but never razed, serve as shelters for birds and rats and have become an open-air rubbish heap.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127875496_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
At the end of the 1970s, the Mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Òthe PopeÓ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizza Sella,a splendid cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates over the city. When the authorities began to investigate the corrupt building scheme, it was already too late. Half of them had been completed, and the other half remained unfinished. Today Pizzo Sella, which has gone down in history as the Òhill of dishonourÓ, is an ancestral place straight out of a horror film: the rotting skeletons of 170 villas, some of which confiscated by the authorities, but never razed, serve as shelters for birds and rats and have become an open-air rubbish heap.
© Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127875450_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
A villa owned by one of the most hardened killers of Cosa Nostra, Giuseppe Greco, nicknamed ÒScarpuzzeddaÓ. It is almost 40 meters tall, with eight departments on 4 levels and built perched on the most beautiful cliff on the coast of Mongerbino, near Palermo. The villa, now confiscated but totally abandoned, has a cement stairway directly on the water.
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DUKAS_127875545_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
An unfinished building in Via Tiro a Segno, in Palermo, enlisted among the thousands of constructions seized from the Mafia. After having taken the money for their completion, building firms tied to the Mafia left many of these constructions unfinished.
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© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_127875479_EYE
Buried in concrete: mafia architecture
Mobsters changed the shape of Italian cities, ravaging landscapes with concrete to affirm their authority. At the end of the 1970s, the mafia super boss Michele Greco, nicknamed Ôthe PopeÕ, gave his blessing for the construction of 314 illegal villas on Pizzo Sella, a cape on the gulf of Palermo that dominates the city.
An unfinished building in Via Tiro a Segno, in Palermo, enlisted among the thousands of constructions seized from the Mafia. After having taken the money for their completion, building firms tied to the Mafia left many of these constructions unfinished.
© Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_125868644_EYE
‘Did they give life? No! So how can they take it?’: on the frontline of knife crime As stabbings surged across London, Ciaran Thapar became a mentor to young boys whose lives were in danger. One of his mentees, Jhemar Jonas, showed him how a life beset
ÔDid they give life? No! So how can they take it?Õ: on the frontline of knife crime
As stabbings surged across London, Ciaran Thapar became a mentor to young boys whose lives were in danger. One of his mentees, Jhemar Jonas, showed him how a life beset by violence can still provide hope.
Pictured: Ciaran Thapar & Jhemar Jonas.
© Cian Oba-Smith / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_125868641_EYE
‘Did they give life? No! So how can they take it?’: on the frontline of knife crime As stabbings surged across London, Ciaran Thapar became a mentor to young boys whose lives were in danger. One of his mentees, Jhemar Jonas, showed him how a life beset
ÔDid they give life? No! So how can they take it?Õ: on the frontline of knife crime
As stabbings surged across London, Ciaran Thapar became a mentor to young boys whose lives were in danger. One of his mentees, Jhemar Jonas, showed him how a life beset by violence can still provide hope.
Pictured: Ciaran Thapar & Jhemar Jonas.
© Cian Oba-Smith / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125868638_EYE
‘Did they give life? No! So how can they take it?’: on the frontline of knife crime As stabbings surged across London, Ciaran Thapar became a mentor to young boys whose lives were in danger. One of his mentees, Jhemar Jonas, showed him how a life beset
ÔDid they give life? No! So how can they take it?Õ: on the frontline of knife crime
As stabbings surged across London, Ciaran Thapar became a mentor to young boys whose lives were in danger. One of his mentees, Jhemar Jonas, showed him how a life beset by violence can still provide hope.
Pictured: Ciaran Thapar & Jhemar Jonas.
© Cian Oba-Smith / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_125868639_EYE
‘Did they give life? No! So how can they take it?’: on the frontline of knife crime As stabbings surged across London, Ciaran Thapar became a mentor to young boys whose lives were in danger. One of his mentees, Jhemar Jonas, showed him how a life beset
ÔDid they give life? No! So how can they take it?Õ: on the frontline of knife crime
As stabbings surged across London, Ciaran Thapar became a mentor to young boys whose lives were in danger. One of his mentees, Jhemar Jonas, showed him how a life beset by violence can still provide hope.
Pictured: Ciaran Thapar & Jhemar Jonas.
© Cian Oba-Smith / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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DUKAS_124971257_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Friends and relatives attend the funeral of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, 22, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
The coffin of Bruno Brasil, a 37-year-old Jacarezinho resident, before his burial on Sunday. Police claim all of the 28 victims were suspected criminals but relatives and locals said Brasil was a worker who had absolutely no involvement in crime and had been in the wrong place at the wrong time
© Alan Lima / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_124971261_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Friends and relatives attend the funeral of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, 22, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
The coffin of Bruno Brasil, a 37-year-old Jacarezinho resident, before his burial on Sunday. Police claim all of the 28 victims were suspected criminals but relatives and locals said Brasil was a worker who had absolutely no involvement in crime and had been in the wrong place at the wrong time
© Alan Lima / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_124971269_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Friends and relatives attend the funeral of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, 22, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
The coffin of Bruno Brasil, a 37-year-old Jacarezinho resident, before his burial on Sunday. Police claim all of the 28 victims were suspected criminals but relatives and locals said Brasil was a worker who had absolutely no involvement in crime and had been in the wrong place at the wrong time
© Alan Lima / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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DUKAS_124971280_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Friends and relatives attend the funeral of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, 22, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
The coffin of Bruno Brasil, a 37-year-old Jacarezinho resident, before his burial on Sunday. Police claim all of the 28 victims were suspected criminals but relatives and locals said Brasil was a worker who had absolutely no involvement in crime and had been in the wrong place at the wrong time
© Alan Lima / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_124971264_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Friends and relatives attend the funeral of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, 22, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
The coffin of Bruno Brasil, a 37-year-old Jacarezinho resident, before his burial on Sunday. Police claim all of the 28 victims were suspected criminals but relatives and locals said Brasil was a worker who had absolutely no involvement in crime and had been in the wrong place at the wrong time
© Alan Lima / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_124971240_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Ce?lia Regina Homem de Mello, the 78-year-old grandmother of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, a 22-year-old gang member of was gunned down last Thursday during the most deadly police operation in Rio history.
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DUKAS_124971254_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Ce?lia Regina Homem de Mello, the 78-year-old grandmother of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, a 22-year-old gang member of was gunned down last Thursday during the most deadly police operation in Rio history.
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DUKAS_124971266_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
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DUKAS_124971284_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Friends and relatives attend the funeral of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, 22, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
The coffin of Bruno Brasil, a 37-year-old Jacarezinho resident, before his burial on Sunday. Police claim all of the 28 victims were suspected criminals but relatives and locals said Brasil was a worker who had absolutely no involvement in crime and had been in the wrong place at the wrong time
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DUKAS_124971259_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Ce?lia Regina Homem de Mello, the 78-year-old grandmother of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, a 22-year-old gang member of was gunned down last Thursday during the most deadly police operation in Rio history.
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DUKAS_124971262_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Friends and relatives attend the funeral of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, 22, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
The coffin of Bruno Brasil, a 37-year-old Jacarezinho resident, before his burial on Sunday. Police claim all of the 28 victims were suspected criminals but relatives and locals said Brasil was a worker who had absolutely no involvement in crime and had been in the wrong place at the wrong time
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DUKAS_124971282_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
a funeral car passes by the bus on the way to the cemetery
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DUKAS_124971263_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Thaciana Barbosa, 18, weeps over the coffin of her 22-year-old friend Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
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DUKAS_124971268_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Tatiane Teixeira, 40, sets off for the funeral of her 22-year-old nephew Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
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DUKAS_124971237_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Tatiane Teixeira, 40, sets off for the funeral of her 22-year-old nephew Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
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DUKAS_124971239_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Tatiane Teixeira, 40, sets off for the funeral of her 22-year-old nephew Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
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DUKAS_124971281_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Friends and relatives travel to the funeral of Isaac Pinheiro de Oliveira, 22, on Sunday. Oliveira was one of 29 people killed when police raided one of Rio's largest favelas last Thursday in what was the most deadly police operation in the city's history.
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DUKAS_124971265_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Hundreds of protesters gather in Jacarezinho to denounce the deadliest police operation in Rio history on Friday night. 29 people were killed last Thursday during a police incursion into the favela in northern Rio.
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DUKAS_124971238_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Hundreds of protesters gather in Jacarezinho to denounce the deadliest police operation in Rio history on Friday night. 29 people were killed last Thursday during a police incursion into the favela in northern Rio.
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DUKAS_124971256_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Hundreds of protesters gather in Jacarezinho to denounce the deadliest police operation in Rio history on Friday night. 29 people were killed last Thursday during a police incursion into the favela in northern Rio.
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DUKAS_124971260_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Many of the victims appear to have been involved in the drug trade, their nicknames spray painted onto black plastic banners that now hang over Jacarezinho’s main streets.
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DUKAS_124971235_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Many of the victims appear to have been involved in the drug trade, their nicknames spray painted onto black plastic banners that now hang over Jacarezinho’s main streets.
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DUKAS_124971236_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
A young girl examines a bullet-riddled wall at the heart of the Jacarezinho after the most deadly police operation in Rio history left 29 people dead.
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DUKAS_124971283_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Jacarezinho, one of Rio's largest favelas, was last week the scene of the most deadly police operation in Rio history
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DUKAS_124971258_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
A child's bedroom on Saint Manuel's lane where police killed one of the 28 victims of last week's raid. The 29th victim was a police officer shot as he entered the favela.
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DUKAS_124971267_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
A child's bedroom on Saint Manuel's lane where police killed one of the 28 victims of last week's raid. The 29th victim was a police officer shot as he entered the favela.
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DUKAS_124971255_EYE
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest
‘They came to kill’: Rio’s deadliest favela police raid sparks calls for change. Rio’s favelas have suffered countless horrors since the drug conflict began to intensify in the 1980s and the carnage in Jacarezinho has caused a wave of protest.
Jacarezinho, one of Rio's largest favelas, was last week the scene of the most deadly police operation in Rio history
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DUK10139287_005
NEWS - USA: Trump-Mob verwüstet US-Kapitol in Washington
Mandatory Credit: Photo by KBD/Shutterstock (11698274a)
Damage is seen after a Pro-Trump mob stormed and occupied the U.S. Capitol Building in clash with U.S. Capitol Police, in Washington, DC on Thursday, January 7, 2021. A mob of President Trump supporter broke through several levels of security smashing windows and doors as they stormed the U.S. Capitol Building and occupied both of the Congressional chambers as Congress met to certify the 2020 presidential election.
Damage following a pro-Trump riot at the U.S. Capitol, Washington DC, USA - 07 Jan 2021
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