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Rio de Janeiro police are investigating allegations that more than 30 men and boys raped a 16-year-old girl, officials revealed, as outrage spread in the host city for the upcoming Olympics, and reverberated across the country. Two men have been arrested and the police are looking for four other suspects.
The reported assault was discovered after one of the suspects posted a video of the nude, semi-conscious youth, with a few men brazenly insulting the girl, showing their faces, on Twitter. One man is heard saying, “more than 30 impregnated her!” Another photo posted showed a different man with his face next to the woman’s genitalia with a caption that reads, “Rio state opens a new tunnel for the speed train.”
At a news conference on Friday, the police said the girl reported being raped by 33 men. The police said they had been unable to confirm exactly how many men may have taken part.
Agencia Brasil said the suspects are 22-year-old Rai Souza, who turned himself into police, and 20-year-old Lucas Perdomo, a local football player. Police declined to provide details about the two people arrested.
Police has asked the public to help track down the four men and identify the others. Local reports said more than 800 people had called a hotline that was set up to share information.
The victim’s grandmother responded to the brutal crime and the online circulation of the video:
The unidentified victim spoke with Al-Jazeera and CNN on how she felt and what she remembers from the incident.
The case has rocked Latin America’s largest nation and highlighted its endemic problem of violence against women.
The announcement came as acting President Michel Temer called an emergency meeting of the security ministers for each of Brazil’s states to consider gender-related crimes.
Authorities say the rape happened last Saturday while the girl was visiting her boyfriend in the Sao Joao shantytown on the west side of Rio de Janeiro.
Brazil has long struggled to curb violence against women. A study by the Brazilian Center for Latin American Studies found that between 1980 and 2010, more than 92,000 women were killed in crimes related to gender, involving incidents from rape to domestic abuse. Almost 50,000 rapes were reported in 2014 alone.
The girl’s 19-year-old boyfriend is one of the men being sought, but police said they did not know whether he may have been one of the attackers. Police said the men were armed, though it wasn’t clear if the weapons were used to intimidate the girl during the attack.
Guns are common in Rio’s drug- and-violence-plagued slums, as are reprisal killings.
When asked by reporters if the girl’s life might be in danger for reporting the incident, Veloso responded:
The attack took place in Rio de Janeiro’s favelas, which are most dense and extremely poor neighbourhoods that are most often built to the side of the city’s steep slopes. Currently, there is a wave of violence that has hit the favelas again due to Brazil facing one of its worst economic crisis in nearly a century. $550 million was cut from 2016’s budget for the police and special forces that used to heavily patrol the favelas.
Hashtags on Twitter such as #EstuproNaoÉCulpaDaVitima – Portuguese for “rape is not the victim’s fault” – and #EstuproNuncaMais (RapeNeverAgain), blasting the reported crime were among the top global trends.
Many Facebook users in Brazil, including suspended President Dilma Rousseff, the nation’s first woman leader, changed their profile photos to the Venus female gender symbol with words calling for an end to a “culture of rape.”
The victim herself took to Facebook to say:
(With agency inputs.)
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