2017 Military Police of Espírito Santo strike
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| 2017 Military Police of Espírito Santo strike | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brazilian Army soldiers in a street in Vitória. | |||||
| |||||
| Belligerents | |||||
|
Gangs, criminals, looters and drug traffickers
| |||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||
|
Gen. Adilson Carlos Katibe Gov. Paulo Hartung César Colnago | Unknown | ||||
| Strength | |||||
|
3.000 Army soldiers 200 Marines 500 Officers National Forces 6 Mowag Piranha III 6 EE-11 Urutu 3 Helicopters | Unknown | ||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||
| 215 dead in total | |||||

The 2017 Military Police of Espírito Santo strike was a strike by the Military Police of Espírito Santo State from 4 to 25 February 2017.
Military policemen in Espírito Santo launched to an illegal strike after demonstrations by relatives in the Metropolitan Region of Greater Vitória against low salaries.[1] Local criminals exploited the strike and a crime wave of violence, carjacking and looting spread across Espírito Santo, with most public services and businesses being closed. The Espírito Santo state government called in assistance from the National Public Security Force and the Brazilian Armed Forces to restore law and order in Vitória and other cities until military policemen began to return to their duties after two weeks of strike action. By 25 February, all military policemen in Espírito Santo had ended their strikes.
An estimated 215 people were killed in Espírito Santo during the violence, and hundreds of military policemen were indicted for involvement in the illegal strike.[2]
On 3 February 2017, acquaintances and relatives of police officers protested in front of the Military Police Detachment blocking the exit of police vehicles in Serra. According to the police, the protests were peaceful.[3] The strike itself began in the early hours of Saturday, 4 February, with protests in the cities of the Greater Vitória, Linhares, Aracruz, Colatina and Piúma.
Brazilian law prohibits strikes by military police officers. A decision by the Court of Justice of Espírito Santo on 6 February ordered the end of the strike and a daily fine of R$100,000 if the Military Police refused to comply with the order.[4] The situation became more extreme when Humberto Mileip, vice president of the state Civil Police Union, said that after the Military Police's strike, the Civil Police would go on strike. "Our salary is one of the lowest in Brazil. In recent years, there has been no compensation for inflation", Mileip said.[5]
There were also clashes between civilians themselves. Groups of residents of the region went to the barracks to convince the demonstrators to vacate the place. Thus, residents began to protest demanding the return of policing.[6]
Violence outbreak
According to the Civil Police Union of Espírito Santo, 215 people suffered violent deaths in the state since the protests began until 24 February.[7]
With violence escalating steadily, the state government called for help from the Armed Forces and the National Force to contain the criminals.[8]
In the strike period, shops, schools and health posts closed. The return to school was suspended for the public school students. Some bank branches and shopping malls have run regularly.[9]
The Department of Legal Medicine of Vitória got its refrigerators full and with corpses scattered along its corridors.[10] Under normal conditions, three or four corpses are examined and two are released per day in the department, which holds a maximum of 36.[11]
In addition to the deaths, hundreds of stores were looted[12] and about 200 vehicles were stolen during this period. The number of occurrences increased tenfold over the state average. According to the president of the Civil Police Union, this one does not have enough officials to investigate crimes of this magnitude.[13]