The Brigadas Revolucionarias (BR) were a terrorist organization active in Portugal between 1970 and 1980. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Founded in 1970 by a group of dissidents from the Portuguese Communist Party, the BR were initially led by Isabel do Carmo, Carlos Antunes and Pedro Goulart, who were unhappy with the pacifist narrative of the Communist Party. [5] The first bomb attack took place on November 7, 1971, against the NATO facilities in Fonte da Telha, Portugal. [6] Most of its members were previously in the Communist Party, in particular Carlos Antunes and Isabel do Carmo, who kept Communist Party dominant no-kill narrative and preferred spectacular and media-centric actions instead.
Despite the overthrown of the Portuguese dictatorship in 1974, the BR did not abandon armed violence. The BR become frustrated with the end of the revolutionary period, the beginning of the consolidation of democracy and the preparation of Portugal’s entry into the European Economic Community (EEC). Accordingly, they carried out a series of bomb attacks and bank robberies from 1975 to 1980. At the same time its political arm, the Partido Revolucionário do Proletariado (PRP), supported Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho for the presidency in 1976, and later being the founder and promoter of the Unitary Organization of Workers (OUT) in whose first Congress in April 1978 participated other political parties with close links with terrorist groups, such as: ETA (Spain), Autonomia Operaia (Italy), Polisario Front (Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic); and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman. [3]
In 1978 the bomb attack of a freight train in Mauritania, which caused the death of eight soldiers opened a series of internal discussions and disputes inside the BR. The attack was claimed by the Polisario Front but it, organised by the Algerian Secret Services and carried out with the help of some BR militants. This was the first BR action intentionally meant to cause deaths. However at that time, most of its leaders were already in prison for bank robberies and denied knowledge of this action. [3]
Despite direct lethal violence and planned assassinations were not supported, at least 3 assassinations occurred as a consequence of cross fires with security forces like PSP or Policia Judiciária and the assassination of José Plácido, a former member who had decided to abandon the PRP/BR and cooperate with the law. Isabel do Carmo and Carlos Antunes, both in jail, not only denied any involvement and criticized the crime. [7]
Within the BR the issue of the use of lethal violence and killings was something that had always been on the table and over time some militants rebelled against the narratives of restraint that were defended mainly by Isabel do Carmo and Carlos Antunes. [3] After 1978, with the arrest of the majority of BR leadership, including Isabel do Carmo and Carlos Antunes, proved decisive for the more radical faction inside the BR to move to deliberate killings. Some of its members led by Pedro Goulart ended up engaging into lethal violence joining Forças Populares 25 de Abril (FP-25), a terrorist organization created and led by Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho. [8] that used lethal violence as part of its methods and intimidation strategy. [9] [10]
The BR ended up being extinguished in 1980, due to internal disputes and the imprisonment of several members, including the leaders, Carlos Antunes and Isabel do Carmo, arrested on charges of bank robberies and bombings. Most of its members, including Pedro Goulart ended up joining Forças Populares 25 de Abril the far-left terrorist group.
Presidential elections were held in Portugal on 7 December 1980.
Partido Revolucionário do Proletariado - Brigadas Revolucionárias was a political organization in Portugal. The Revolutionary Brigades were founded in 1970 by Isabel do Carmo, Carlos Antunes and Pedro Goulart, and advocated armed struggle against the regime. The first armed action was carried out in 1971. PRP-BR was constructed as a party later. In 1975 the PRP attempted to create a School of Proletarian Culture as an alternative to bourgeois education. The PRP supported the candidacy for the 1976 presidential elections of Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho. After November 25, 1975, PRP and Revolutionary Brigades were formally separated. PRP-BR did not participate in elections after the advent of democracy in Portugal.
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The Forças Populares 25 de Abril was a far-left terrorist group led by Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho, operating in Portugal between 1980 and 1987. Most of its members had previously been active in the Brigadas Revolucionárias, an armed group with links to the Revolutionary Party of the Proletariat.
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Events in the year 2021 in Portugal.
Carlos Carneiro Antunes was a Portuguese terrorist and politician. He was, together with Isabel do Carmo, co-founder of the Brigadas Revolucionárias a Portuguese far-left terrorist organization that acted in Portugal between 1970 and 1980.
Isabel do CarmoComL is a former founder and leader of the Portuguese terrorist organization, Brigadas Revolucionárias (BR), which took part in an armed struggle against the Portuguese government, both before and after the overthrow of the repressive Estado Novo regime. She was also the founder and leader of Partido Revolucionário do Proletariado (PRP), a political organization never formalized as a party and created to support the BR. She was held in pre-trial prison from 1978 to 1982. Carmo, a doctor and a University professor, has published extensively, on both medical and political issues.
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A Hora da Liberdade is a Portuguese docudrama produced and aired by SIC in 1999 which portraits the events that led to the military coup on 25 April 1974, responsible for the restoration of democracy in Portugal. It was produced by Emídio Rangel Hayley Westenra, Rodrigo de Sousa e Castro and Joana Pontes who also assured its direction. From the interviews made to create the film, the book "A Hora da Liberdade - O 25 de Abril pelos protagonistas" was created, published by Editorial Bizâncio. It was considered one of the best movies on the topic of the Carnation Revolution according to Time Out Magazine.
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