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Author Topic: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials  (Read 1256 times)

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Offline weary1969

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Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« on: February 15, 2012, 10:17:24 AM »
TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) - A massive fire swept through an overcrowded prison in Honduras and killed more than 350 inmates, including many trapped screaming inside their cells, officials said on Wednesday.

A senior official at the attorney general's office, Danelia Ferrera, said 357 people died in the blaze that began late on Tuesday night at the prison in Comayagua, about 75 kilometers (45 miles) north of the capital Tegucigalpa.

It was one of the worst prison fires ever in Latin America, and local radio reports said many of the inmates were burned to death inside their cells.

"We heard screaming from the people who caught on fire," one prisoner told reporters, showing the fingers he fractured in his escape from the fire. "We had to push up the roof panels to get out."

Worried and angry relatives surrounded the prison on Wednesday morning with some throwing rocks at police and trying to force their way into the prison. Police responded by firing shots into the air and tear gas at the protesters, who were mostly women.

There was confusion over the death toll, with some reports that the 357 figure included more than 100 inmates who escaped during the fire and others that the dead and missing totaled 402 people - almost half the prison's inmates.

Lucy Marder, head of forensic services in Comayagua, said police reported that one of the dead was a woman who stayed overnight and the rest were prisoners, but she said some of the presumed dead could have escaped. Local media reported that the Comayagua fire department chief also died in the blaze.

Honduras has the highest murder rate in the world, according to the United Nations, and there are frequent riots and clashes between members of rival street gangs in its overcrowded prisons. But it was not yet clear if the fire was started during a riot or if it was accident.

The gangs, known as 'maras', started in the United States and then spread down into Central America, with members covered in distinctive tattoos and involved in drug trafficking, armed robbery and protection rackets.

The Comayagua prison housed more than 850 inmates -- well above its capacity. Local police chief Hector Mejia read out the names of 457 survivors outside the prison, but relatives were not appeased.

"This is desperate, they won't tell us anything and I think my husband is dead," a crying Gregoria Zelaya told Canal 5 TV as she stood by a chain link fence.

Local firemen said they were prevented from entering the prison due to gunshots. But Daniel Orellana, head of the prison system, said there was no riot.

"We have two hypotheses, one is that a prisoner set fire to a mattress and the other one is that there was a short circuit in the electrical system," he said.

Across Honduras, prisons are filled to double their capacity with about 12,500 prisoners in jails meant to hold 6,000. More than 100 prisoners were killed in a fire in the textile manufacturing town of San Pedro Sula several years ago, and survivors said later that guards fired on prisoners trying to escape the blaze.

Honduras clocked more than 80 homicides per 100,000 people in 2009, a rate 16 times that of the United States, according to a United Nations report last year.

The country is a major drug trafficking transit point for South American cocaine moving north to consumers in the United States, and authorities say there is increasing presence of violent Mexican drug cartels in the country.

A political crisis ripped through Honduras in mid-2009 when a widely-condemned coup toppled the democratically elected president but the country has been trying to heal divisions since the election of President Porfirio Lobo later that year.

(Additional reporting by Cyntia Barrera and Mica Rosenberg in Mexico; Editing by Philip Barbara and Kieran Murray)
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Offline Dutty

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Re: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« Reply #1 on: February 15, 2012, 03:52:42 PM »
wow!!  too many deaths.....dais real overcrowdin inside dey oui
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Offline weary1969

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Re: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« Reply #2 on: February 15, 2012, 04:54:56 PM »
wow!!  too many deaths.....dais real overcrowdin inside dey oui

ENTTTTT
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Offline capodetutticapi

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Re: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« Reply #3 on: February 15, 2012, 05:44:04 PM »
burnt alive is ah hard way to go sah
soon ah go b ah lean mean bulling machine.

Offline weary1969

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Re: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« Reply #4 on: February 15, 2012, 06:57:50 PM »
burnt alive is ah hard way to go sah

Which 1 worse dat or drowning?
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Offline capodetutticapi

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Re: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« Reply #5 on: February 16, 2012, 08:48:18 AM »
burnt alive is ah hard way to go sah

Which 1 worse dat or drowning?
i prefer get bun...cyar handle water fullin up in yuh lungs.
soon ah go b ah lean mean bulling machine.

Offline weary1969

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Re: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« Reply #6 on: February 16, 2012, 09:09:56 AM »
burnt alive is ah hard way to go sah

Which 1 worse dat or drowning?
i prefer get bun...cyar handle water fullin up in yuh lungs.

k
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Offline ZANDOLIE

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Re: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« Reply #7 on: February 21, 2012, 05:36:22 PM »
on a related note....

9 Mexico prison guards helped gangsters escape From cbc.ca


Nine guards have confessed to helping Zetas drug gangsters escape from prison before other Zetas slaughtered 44 rival inmates, a state official said late Monday, underlining the enormous corruption inside Mexico's overcrowded, underfunded prisons.

The top officials and as many as 18 guards at the Apodaca prison in northern Mexico had been detained under suspicion that they may have helped 30 Zetas escape during the confusion of a riot early Sunday in which 44 members of the rival Gulf cartel were bludgeoned and knifed to death.

Nuevo Leon state public security spokesman Jorge Domene Zambrano said nine of the guards confessed to aiding the escape. He said it appeared the breakout happened before the deadly fight.

The massacre in this northern state was one of the worst prison killings in Mexico in at least a quarter-century and exposed another weak institution that President Felipe Calderon is relying on to fight his drug war.

Mexico has only six federal prisons, and so sends many of its dangerous cartel suspects and inmates to ill-prepared, overcrowded state penitentiaries. Drug trafficking, weapons possession and money laundering are all considered federal crimes in Mexico.

"The Mexican prison system has collapsed," said Raul Benitez, a professor at Mexico's National Autonomous University who studies security issues. "The prisons in some states are controlled by organized crime."

An increase in organized crime, extortion, drug trafficking and kidnapping has swelled Mexico's prison population almost 50 per cent since 2000. But the government has built no new federal prisons since Calderon launched an offensive against drug cartels when he took office in late 2006, leaving existing jails overcrowded.

45,000 over capacity

Calderon's administration has renovated three existing state prisons to use as federal lockups.

Built to hold about 185,000 inmates, the prison system nationwide now holds more than 45,000 above that capacity, according to figures from the National Public Safety System.

Of the 47,000 federal inmates in the country, about 29,000 are held in state prisons. That has drawn complaints from Nuevo Leon Gov. Rodrigo Medina and other state governors, who say their jails aren't equipped to hold members of powerful and highly organized drug cartels.
The federal government counters that none of the escapes or mass killings have occurred at federal lockups, and it cites corruption on the state level, not overcrowding, as the main cause of the deaths and escapes.

"The constant element has been corruption in the control processes" at the prisons, said Patricio Patino, assistant secretary for the penitentiary system.

Prison employees say guards are underpaid, making them more likely to take bribes. And even honest guards are vulnerable to coercion: Many live in neighborhoods where street gangs and drug cartels are active, making it easy to target their families with threats.

Thousands helping drug gangs

The same can be said for Mexico's municipal police forces, another weak flank in Calderon's attack on organized crime. Thousands of local officers — often, entire forces at a time — have been fired, detained or placed under investigation for aiding drug gangs.

"Yesterday, Apodaca, tomorrow, any other (prison)," columnist Carlos Puig wrote in the newspaper Milenio.

Nuevo Leon's governor said earlier Monday that the breakout would have been hard or impossible to stage without the help of prison authorities. Medina said no holes had been found in the perimetre walls of the prison in Apodaca, outside the northern city of Monterrey, and no armed gang had burst in to spring them.

"Unfortunately, a group of traitors has set back the work of a lot of good police," Medina said at a news conference.

An increase in prison violence and escapes is fueled in part by the increasing presence of members of highly organized drug cartels and other gangs in the prisons. In January, a fight between inmates in the Gulf Coast city of Altamira left 31 dead. A total of 171 inmates died in such violence last year, up from 45 in 2007, according to the newspaper Milenio.

Often, the riots and escapes are aided by authorities.

In the most striking case, prison corruption resulted in a massacre outside prison walls in 2010.

Back to their cells

Guards and officials at a prison in Gomez Palacio in northern Durango state let cartel inmates out, lent them guns and sent them off in official vehicles to carry out drug-related killings, including a massacre of 17 people at a rented dance hall. After carrying out the killings, the inmates returned to their cells, where they were safe from their rivals.

More typical was a prison massacre last July in the border city of Juarez that killed 17 inmates. Surveillance video showed guards standing passively by as two inmates took their keys and opened cell doors to spray bullets into a room where members of a rival gang were reportedly holding an unauthorized party, complete with women and booze.

The Zetas, with their quasi-military discipline, probably have an edge on their rivals from the Gulf cartel, said Benitez, the professor who studies security.

"Once inside, they gain control rapidly," he said.

The Zetas and Gulf cartel split in 2010 and have been fighting bloody turf battles in Monterrey and throughout much of northeastern Mexico since then.

Reform going badly

But Benitez said Mexico's prisons are part of two larger problems: rampant corruption and a dysfunctional justice system.

"The prison system is just one part of the larger penal-justice system, and in Mexico the penal reform movement is going very badly," he said.

Authorities agreed there are huge problems.

"The shortcomings that exist in Mexican prisons, insufficient food, inadequate space to sleep, (poor) clothing for inmates, bad medical service, have made the prisons into places where corruption and inequality among inmates proliferates," according to a 2008 report on the nation's prisons, the federal Public Safety Department said

The report recommended legal changes to let more prisoners await trial while on bail, and the construction of more and better jails. Three years and hundreds of inmates deaths later, none of those changes has been carried out.


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Offline weary1969

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Re: Honduras prison fire kills more than 350 inmates: officials
« Reply #8 on: February 21, 2012, 08:30:46 PM »
D prison thread
Today you're the dog, tomorrow you're the hydrant - so be good to others - it comes back!"

 

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