Bar Patron Slain After Identifying Presidential Pick

Concern about political violence in Brazil is high
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Sep 26, 2022 6:21 PM CDT
Bar Patron Slain After Identifying Presidential Pick
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who is running for president of Brazil, gets emotional during a meeting with persons with disabilities during a rally in Sao Paulo last week.   (AP Photo/Marcelo Chello)

Brazilian police said on Monday that a 39-year-old supporter of former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva was stabbed to death in a bar amid rising concern about political violence in a tense presidential campaign. The newspaper O Povo reported that witnesses told police a man entered a bar in the city of Cascavel on Saturday and asked who was voting for da Silva in the Oct. 2 election. A man said, "I will," and then was stabbed. He died in a hospital the same day. A Ceara state police official confirmed the report Monday, the AP reports, speaking on condition of anonymity due to a lack of authorization to comment.

Police earlier issued a statement saying the man was killed due to a "political discussion" and said a 59-year-old suspect named Edmilson Freire da Silva had been arrested. The nonprofit Human Rights Watch said it regrets "one more assassination with an apparent political motivation" during the Brazilian electoral campaign. Ceara state is a stronghold for da Silva and his Workers' Party. "Candidates should vehemently condemn any act of violence and promote peaceful elections," it said on Twitter. Neither Bolsonaro nor da Silva have commented on the incident.

Brazilian media reported that police in the state of Santa Catarina, a Bolsonaro stronghold, are investigating a second killing that could be linked to politics. On Saturday, a 34-year-old man died after being stabbed in Rio do Sul, a city of 72,000. Supporters of the president have said on social media channels that Hildor Henker was killed in a bar fight after he voiced his support for the far-right leader. Da Silva, a leftist who governed from 2003 to 2010, is leading in virtually all polls against right-wing incumbent Jair Bolsonaro, who has insisted that the polls are wrong and that election fraud may rob him of the presidency.

(More Brazil stories.)

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