At least 57 inmates were killed on Monday during a prison riot in northern Brazil as rival gang factions fought each other, an official said.
Sixteen people were decapitated in the second major eruption of violence to rock the nation’s severely overpopulated and deadly prison system in as many months.
Fighting broke out in the Altamira Regional Recovery Center at about 7am, an official from the Para State Penitentiary Department said.
Photo: Reuters
Two guards were taken hostage during the hours-long clashes, which were brought under control at about midday.
The guards were eventually freed.
Brazilian TV showed footage of thick black smoke rising from the prison compound and people sitting on the roof of a building. Other images showed flames inside a building that almost reached the ceiling and people, apparently prisoners, sitting on the ground outside.
“It is likely that many detainees died from asphyxiation [from smoke],” a government official said.
No firearms were found at the scene, but improvised knives appear to have been used in the turf war, the department said in a statement.
Some of the bodies had not yet been recovered due to the heat inside some of the prison structures.
The Brazilian Ministry of Justice and Public Security said that ringleaders of the violence would be transferred to federal jails, which are more secure.
About 311 prisoners were being held at the jail, which the department said was not overcrowded. It reportedly has a capacity for 200 inmates.
An outbreak of violence in the same prison in September last year left at least seven inmates dead, local media reported previously. Guards had apparently foiled an attempted prison escape.
In May at least 55 prisoners were killed at several jails in the neighboring state of Amazonas, violence also blamed on an apparent drug trafficking gang dispute.
Most of the victims were killed by asphyxiation, the state government said at the time, as the federal government dispatched reinforcements to boost security in the jails.
Brazil has the world’s third-largest prison population after the US and China, with 726,354 inmates as of June 2017, according to official statistics released this month.
The population is way above the capacity of the nation’s jails, which in the same year was estimated to be 423,242 inmates.
The federal government had been expected to add another 115,000 inmates by the end of last year, Human Rights Watch said in a report.
About 33 percent of the prison population is made up of pretrial detainees.
Experts estimate that hundreds of people are killed in prison violence every year in Brazil. Conditions have been described as inhuman, with most inmates poor, black and with little formal education.
“Brazilian policymakers have typically responded to the prison crisis by building more prisons, stiffening penalties, and separating gang leaders from the rank and file,” said Robert Muggah, research director at the Igarape Institute, a think tank in Rio de Janeiro. “The only way the government can turn the situation around in the short term is by reducing the stock and flow of inmates.”
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