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Forensic police arrive after a fight between rival gangs occurred in the prison
At
least 18 inmates died and 16 were injured in overnight clashes between
prisoners in Honduras after fighting erupted at a jail in the northern port
town of Tela, prison officials said Saturday.
The
National Penitentiary Institute said 17 prisoners had died at the facility in
Tela, about 120 miles (200 kilometers) from the capital Tegucigalpa, and
another died in hospital, with local media describing the unrest as gang
violence.
A
prison spokesperson, Digna Aguilar, said authorities had to enter the area carefully
“for fear of being among the victims” because several inmates carried firearms.
That slowed the investigation.
The
combined national security force known as Fusina said that five 9 millimeter
guns, as well as ammunition, had been seized from the inmates.
Prison
officials had originally reported only three deaths, but the toll quickly rose.
Forensic
workers placed the bodies in plastic bags and transported them to the judicial
morgue of San Pedro Sula to be autopsied.
An AFP
photographer at the scene saw shocked relatives arriving to claim the bodies.
Earlier
killings
Honduran
President Juan Orlando Hernandez, grappling with a recent wave of prison
killings, had ordered the army and the police on Tuesday to take full control
of the country’s 27 prisons, which are badly overcrowded with some 21,000
inmates.
But as
of Friday, the military had yet to take complete control of the Tela detention
center, according to Aguilar.
On
Saturday, top military officer General Tito Livio Moreno indicated that the military
would be deployed in 18 penal centers identified as “high risk.”
Hernandez
announced the crackdown after the killings on December 14 of five members of
feared gang Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) by a fellow detainee at the high-security
prison in La Tolva, 25 miles east of Tegucigalpa.
That
came just a day after Pedro Idelfonso Armas, the warden of El Pozo — the
country’s main high-security prison, in the western city of Santa Barbara — was
shot dead in the south of the country.
The
Ministry of Security had suspended Armas shortly before that amid an
investigation into his presence during the October 26 killing by prisoners of
Magdaleno Meza, a drug kingpin whose confession and notebooks linked him to a
brother of the president, Juan Antonio “Tony” Hernandez.
Meza’s
account books were entered as evidence in the New York trial of Hernandez, who
was subsequently convicted on four counts of drug trafficking. He faces
sentencing — possibly for life — in January.
President
Hernandez condemned the conviction of his younger brother, saying it was based
on “the testimony of confessed assassins.”
Violent
country
A video
circulating on social media shows the 52-year-old Armas talking with Meza when
prison guards opened a locked gate, allowing a dozen inmates to burst in and
stab and fatally shoot the drug trafficker.
In
addition, a lawyer who had represented Meza and other members of the Valle
Valle drug cartel, Jose Luis Pinto, was killed in an attack December 9 in a
town northwest of Tegucigalpa. That killing remains under investigation.
Honduras
has been plagued by drug trafficking, gangs, poverty and corruption.
It
suffers from one of the highest homicide rates in the world outside areas of
armed conflict, having registered 41.2 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants in 2018.
To
fight this scourge, President Hernandez created a military police force
financed by a new tax, and built special prisons for gang members.
The
sky-high crime rate has been a key factor behind a wave of migration toward the
United States, notably by minors who say they fear being forced into gangs.
(AFP)