Protests erupt in Brazil after black man dies
after being beaten outside supermarket
João Alberto Silveira Freitas was allegedly attacked
by security guards at a Carrefour store in Porto Alegre
Associated
Press
Sat 21 Nov
2020 07.27 GMT
A black man
who died after being beaten by supermarket security guards in the city of Porto
Alegre on the eve of Black Consciousness Day has sparked outrage across Brazil
after videos of the incident circulated on social media.
Footage
showed João Alberto Silveira Freitas being punched in the face just outside the
doors of a Carrefour supermarket, late on Thursday. Other clips showed Freitas’
being kneeled on.
Dozens of
protesters entered a Carrefour in Brazil’s capital, Brasilia, on Friday
morning, chanting “Black lives matter!” One held a sign reading: “Don’t shop at
Carrefour. You could die”. Inside another Carrefour in Rio de Janeiro,
protesters shouted “Carrefour Killer!” as a black man lay still atop the
conveyor belt of a checkout. They forced the store’s closure.
In Sao
Paulo, protesters smashed the front window of a Carrefour, scattered goods from
shelves all over the store’s floor and set a fire that employees hurried to
extinguish.
Carrefour
released a statement lamenting Freitas’ “brutal death”, and said it would end
its contract with the security company, fire the store manager who was on duty,
and close the Porto Alegre store out of respect for the victim.
The two men
who allegedly beat Freitas have been detained and are being investigated for
homicide due to the victim’s asphyxiation and his inability to defend himself,
said Nadine Anflor, the civil police chief for the southern state of Rio Grande
do Sul, where Porto Alegre is capital. One of the men was a temporary military
police officer who was off-duty, said Rodrigo Mohr, head of the state’s
military police.
Black
Consciousness Day is observed as a holiday in many parts of Brazil. In Rio on
Friday, a group of people participated in a celebration with Afro-Brazilian
dance and music in the working-class Santa Marta favela. Members of a samba
school performed a ritualistic “washing” of the steps leading up into the
hillside neighbourhood.
Black and
mixed-race people account for about 57% of Brazil’s population but constitute
74% of victims of lethal violence, according to the Brazilian Forum on Public
Safety, a non-governmental organisation. The percentage is even higher, 79%,
for those killed by police.
Local
online news site G1 reported that the incident at the Carrefour in Porto Alegre
followed a confrontation between Freitas and a supermarket employee, who then
called security. Both guards
were white, G1 reported.
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