 With banners that read, Black Lives Matter, Justice for Mois, and immigrants matter, thousands of protesters took to the streets of several Brazilian cities on February 5th. They were out on the streets to demand justice for Mois Cabangabe, a migrant worker living in Rio de Janeiro, who was murdered on January 24th. The demonstrations were organized by migrant communities, collectives, and popular movements. Millions who took place in the protests in nine states denounced precarious work, racism, and xenophobia against immigrants. As Brazilians, we know the weight of genocide against our people, the weight of extermination that our people constantly suffer, but this is more than just that, a case of xenophobia that is very explicit, in which an immigrant with a goal was murdered in the same way that Brazilians are constantly murdered. We are here today to ask for justice for the Brazilian government, because this case is very confusing, it is a guy who was worked for, honestly, with his blood, and they didn't pay and killed him, so it could also be without him. 24-year-old Mois Cabangabe, a Congolese migrant, was found dead on January 24th, after being beaten to death in Rio de Janeiro. Cabangabe had gone to the Trapacalía Kiosk in the Barre de Tijuca Beach to collect payment for working two days as a kitchen helper, according to family members. In response, men from the kiosk beat him for 15 minutes until his death. Cabangabe was found on a ladder, tied up, and already dead by the time police arrived. Family members only found out about the death on Tuesday morning, January 25th, almost 12 hours after the crime. A man who claimed to have participated in the murder turned himself into the police on February 1st. On the same day, the government of the state of Rio de Janeiro announced that it will suspend the operation permit of the Trapacalía Kiosk. The city government of Rio de Janeiro has since announced that it will transform the kiosk into a memorial to Mois and African culture. The owner of the kiosk has not yet been released and is expected to give a statement to the police on Tuesday. Brazil, according to Mois, according to Patria, because this can happen in Brazil in the 21st century, this is intolerable and acceptable in a country like Brazil, we want justice. No one is born foreign, no one is born new, everyone is equal, everyone is equal, we have the same blood, blood is red, everyone has this red blood, we want justice, everyone is working, everyone was honest, everyone in this country knows Moisés, everyone wants justice, we want justice. In a joint note, Caritas Rio de Janeiro, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and the International Organization for Migration, detailed how Mois arrived in Brazil as a child, accompanied by his brothers. Once in the country, he and his family were recognized as refugees by the Brazilian government. The Embassy of the Democratic Republic of the Congo said that they are in contact with Moisés family who are demanding a statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The embassy is also demanding answers from the Brazilian government regarding investigations into other Congolese migrants killed in the country.