Kuwait Times

Prison clashes leave 36 dead in Honduras

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TEGUCIGALP­A, Honduras: At least 36 people were killed in weekend clashes in Honduran prisons as the military and police try to regain control after a spate of murders linked to the criminal gangs plaguing the country.

On Sunday afternoon, 18 gang members died in a clash between inmates at El Porvenir prison, 60 kilometers (40 miles) north of the capital Tegucigalp­a.

“Firearms, knives and machetes” were used in the brawl, which also left 10 wounded, Lieutenant Jose Coello, a spokesman for the National InterInsti­tutional Security Force (Fusina), told local media.

On Friday night, 18 prisoners died and 16 were wounded in a shooting at the prison in the port town of Tela, northwest of the capital. The killings came shortly after President Juan Orlando Hernandezg­rappling with a wave of prison killingsor­dered the army and the police on Tuesday to take control of the country’s 27 prisons, which are badly overcrowde­d with some 21,000 inmates.

The security forces later said they were deploying about 1,200 military and police in 18 facilities classified as “high risk.”

Hernandez announced the crackdown after the killings on December 14 of five members of the feared MS-13 gang by a fellow detainee at the high-security prison in La Tolva, east of Tegucigalp­a.

That came just a day after Pedro Idelfonso Armas, the warden of Honduras’s main high security prison in Santa Barbara, El Pozo, was shot dead in the south of the country.

The security ministry had suspended Armas shortly before his death, amid an investigat­ion into his presence during the October 26 murder of Magdaleno Meza, a drug kingpin whose confession and notebooks linked him to the president’s brother, Juan Antonio “Tony” Hernandez. Meza’s account books were used 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.

The president condemned the conviction of his younger brother, saying it was based on “the testimony of confessed assassins.” 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 to stab and fatally shoot him.

In statements to the AFP, Meza’s lawyer, Carlos Chajtur, publicly accused the government of having ordered his client to be killed in retaliatio­n for having collaborat­ed with US justice in the trial against Hernandez.

Drugs, gangs, poverty On Sunday night military and police chiefs told the press that the wave of violence inside prisons “is an escalation of the criminal world to try to prevent Fusina (...) from imposing the necessary controls in the country’s penal centers”. The Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights in Honduras (OHCHR) said it observed “with alarm the violence inside prisons”, and urged the state “to guarantee the life and respect of human rights to those deprived of liberty and proceed to a prompt, effective and transparen­t investigat­ion.”

Honduras is plagued by drug traffickin­g, gangs, poverty and corruption. It suffers one of the highest murder rates in the world outside areas of armed conflict, having registered 41.2 homicides per 100,000 inhabitant­s in 2018. To fight this scourge, 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

 ??  ?? TEGUCIGALP­A: Relatives of an inmate killed in a shooting at the El Porvenir prison, north of Tegucigalp­a, cry after learning about the fate of their loved one, outside the morgue in the Honduran capital Tegucigalp­a, on Monday. — AFP
TEGUCIGALP­A: Relatives of an inmate killed in a shooting at the El Porvenir prison, north of Tegucigalp­a, cry after learning about the fate of their loved one, outside the morgue in the Honduran capital Tegucigalp­a, on Monday. — AFP

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