Imperial Valley Press

4 more inmates die in Brazil following deadly prison clash

- Killed during a riot at a

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Four inmates allegedly involved in deadly clash between prison gangs have died of asphyxiati­on while being transferre­d to a safer lockup, authoritie­s said Wednesday, as families of victims began to bury their relatives.

The Para state public security o ce said the four were discovered dead when the prison vehicle arrived in the town of Maraba.

They said vehicle had four compartmen­ts and was carrying 30 handcu ed inmates who were suspected of involvemen­t in Monday’s clash gangs at the Altamira prison.

Authoritie­s said the four who died were from the same gang and said they are investigat­ing.

The prisoners were among 46 being sent to other prisons, including stricter federal ones.

Several holes had been dug in the rust-colored earth at the cemetery of Altamira, where grieving families began to arrive Wednesday to mourn some of the 58 inmates killed by a rival gang in a grisly prison riot.

“We need more security, we need more room (for detainees),” said Gelson Gusmao, whose son died in Monday’s clashes. “There’s a lot of overcrowdi­ng in the prisons, so we want our president to improve the situation inside.”

Back at the forensic institute, dozens of grief-stricken, frustrated families were still waiting to identify slain relatives, fighting o the odor of decomposin­g bodies.

Only 21 bodies had been released to family members by Wednesday morning, a process slowed by the small size of the morgue, lack of staff to deal with the sudden flow of corpses and problems with lighting that meant sta can only work until 6:30 p.m.

In the Amazon heat, the bodies were being kept in a large refrigerat­ed truck. But Brazilian newspaper Folha de S. Paulo reported that for lack of space, corpses were being kept under a makeshift, uncooled tent.

Forensic expert Marcel Ferreira said some passed out when called on the day before to identify the beheaded or burnt bodies of loved ones.

The forensic institute said at least six bodies would undergo DNA testing to be identified.

State officials said clashes erupted in Altamira early Monday when the local Comando Classe A gang attacked a wing of the prison holding members of the rival Comando Vermelho, or Red Command.

In many of Brazil’s prisons, badly outnumbere­d guards struggle to retain control over an ever-growing population of inmates, with jailed gang leaders often able to run their criminal activities from behind bars.

Comando Classe A members allegedly set fire to the temporary containers where inmates belonging to Red Command were being held while constructi­on of another wing was underway. Victims died of burns, asphyxiati­on and 16 had been decapitate­d.

“This is clearly a declaratio­n of war on the Red Command,” said Jean-François Deluchey, adjunct professor in political science at the Federal University of Para who has been studying the region for 20 years.

Authoritie­s have not yet revealed the exact motive for the clash, only confirming that it was a fight between criminal groups. But several recent prison massacres have been attributed to gangs battling to control drug-traffickin­g routes in the multibilli­on-dollar Amazon drug trade.

In May, two days of unrest in the neighborin­g state of Amazonas left 55 prisoners dead in four di erent prisons of that state’s capital, Manaus. In 2017, more than 120 inmates died in prisons across several northern states.

“It’s the same logic, the same movement,” Deluchey said. According to him, Red Command has a strong presence in the north and is trying to expand further in the region.

Deluchey said it is hard to confirm with certainty, but initial reports indicated that Comando Classe A, a local gang thought to have been created recently inside the Altamira prison, is linked to another powerful Brazilian gang, First Capital Command.

“The First Capital Command is losing grounds and it looks like Comando Classe A is helping them stop the hegemony of Red Command,” he said.

The professor said he had already seen promises of retaliatio­ns by members of Red Command for Monday’s attack.

Gruesome violence is often used in Brazilian prisons to gain respect and send a strong message to new arrivals, he said. “Violence is to impress, to frighten, so that new (inmates) join the side of those who decapitate, and not the decapitate­d.”

The killings represent a challenge for the far-right administra­tion of President Jair Bolsonaro. Bolsonaro ran a tough-oncrime campaign, promising to curb epidemic violence in Brazil, including in its overcrowde­d and out-of-control prisons.

 ??  ?? Family members pray during the funeral of a relative who was a prisoner prison in Altamaria, Para state, Brazil, on Wednesday. AP PHOTO/RAIMUNDO PACCO
Family members pray during the funeral of a relative who was a prisoner prison in Altamaria, Para state, Brazil, on Wednesday. AP PHOTO/RAIMUNDO PACCO

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