Brazilian police have
clashed with residents of a Rio de Janeiro shantytown that was hit by deadly
protests on Tuesday.
Police used tear gas
and rubber bullets to disperse dozens of angry protesters from the
Pavao-Pavaozinho favela.
The protesters were
returning from the burial of a man whose death - allegedly at the hands of
police - triggered the earlier clashes.
Authorities say they
will investigate the death of TV dancer Douglas Pereira.
Rio's public safety
director, Jose Maria Beltrame, said they would proceed "with the utmost
rigour and transparency".
The latest clashes
came weeks before Brazil is to host the football World Cup.
On Thursday, cars were
torched and hundreds of residents were unable to return to their homes as
protesters blocked roads with burning barricades.
Police used pepper
spray and tear gas to disperse stone-throwing protesters. One person was
detained, according to Brazilian G1 news portal.
Authorities
temporarily closed the main avenue of the nearby Copacabana district, which is
famous for its sandy beach.
'Everybody
loved him'
The residents had been
walking home from Mr Pereira's funeral.
At the burial, his
mother, Maria de Fatima Silva, told the BBC's Julia Carneiro that she would
seek help from the human rights group Amnesty International.
"This cannot go
unpunished, he can't become just a statistic," she said.
"This story about
him being a criminal is just not true. He was not a delinquent," she told
our correspondent.
| There were scuffles between angry residents and riot police in the touristic district of Copacabana |
According to some
residents, Mr Pereira had been trying to flee from a shoot-out between police
and drug dealers and had climbed over a wall to hide.
They said he had then
been found by police, who, believing he was a trafficker, had beaten him to
death.
| Some people at the funeral called for justice, saying Douglas Pereira was killed by the police |
| The authorities have promised a thorough investigation into the death of the popular dancer |
One person died in
Tuesday's clashes.
Swift
action
Officials said on
Wednesday that the dancer had been killed by a bullet, contradicting an earlier
version that stated he had died from a fall.
The Rio authorities
have promised that, if there were any indications that police were linked to Mr
Pereira's death, swift action would be taken.
Pavao-Pavaozinho is one of the
poor districts of Rio that has been part of a police "pacification"
programme, in which the security forces move into an area in an effort to wrest
control from the drug traffickers who run it.
It is
an attempt by the city authorities to drive the armed gangs away from
communities and restore police authority ahead of the World Cup in June and
July.
But the
programme is controversial as Brazilian police have been accused of using
excessive force, at times killing residents not connected to any gangs.
Amnesty
International says some 2,000 people die every year in Brazil as a result of
police violence.
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