San Francisco Chronicle

Blaze kills at least 51 inmates after prison riot

- By Emma Bubola and Iñigo Alexander Emma Bubola and Iñigo Alexander are New York Times writers.

At least 51 inmates died and 30 people were injured at a prison in Colombia after a fire broke out during a riot Tuesday, the country’s top prison official said.

Gen. Tito Castellano­s, director of the National Penitentia­ry and Prison Institute, told Radio Nacional de Colombia that inmates in the Tuluá prison, in southweste­rn Colombia, had set mattresses on fire, producing an uncontroll­able blaze in a pavilion that held about 180 prisoners.

“It is a sad and disastrous event,” Castellano­s told Caracol, another Colombian broadcaste­r.

Two guards were among those injured, according to officials, who said the riot was staged as part of an unsuccessf­ul escape attempt.

The local fire brigade received the alarm at about 1:35 a.m., said Azarías Medina Hincapié, commander of the Tuluá Fire Department. He added that 25 people had been taken to nearby hospitals for treatment of burns and smoke inhalation. At least two of them died.

The prison houses 1,267 inmates and is 17% over capacity, according to the prison agency. Ten of the 11 pavilions that make up the prison were not involved in the fire.

In 2020, more than 20 inmates died at La Modelo prison in the Colombian capital, Bogotá, in clashes with the institutio­n’s authoritie­s over what prisoners said were insufficie­nt coronaviru­s precaution­s.

This year, the Ombudsman’s Office of Colombia, which oversees civil and human rights in the country, said the prison system was overcrowde­d, with about 96,000 inmates — about 20% over capacity.

The ombudsman, Carlos Camargo, proposed an overhaul of the system to allow “the fulfillmen­t of the purposes of custody and protection of human rights.”

“Inadequate spaces, diseases, stress prevail among the inmates,” Camargo said in a statement in March. “This translates into fights and uprising attempts, which is why we urge comprehens­ive reform of the penitentia­ry and prison system.”

President Iván Duque wrote on Twitter that “we regret the events that occurred in the prison of Tuluá” and said he was in contact with Castellano­s. “I have given instructio­ns to carry out investigat­ions to clarify this terrible situation,” Duque added. “My solidarity to the families of the victims.”

President-elect Gustavo Petro — who will be the first leftist to lead the country — wrote on Twitter that what had happened in Tuluá, “like the massacre in La Modelo, forces a complete rethinking of prison policy in terms of the humanizati­on of the prison and the dignity of the prisoner.”

“The Colombian state has viewed prison as a space for revenge and not for rehabilita­tion,” he added.

Many hours after the blaze was put out, the identities of the victims had not been released, and relatives of the prisoners gathered opposite the Tuluá prison in hopes of learning about their family members. Some resorted to violence against police guarding the prison’s entrance.

 ?? Andres Quintero / Associated Press ?? Inmates’ relatives trying to learn about their family members battle police in Tulua, Colombia.
Andres Quintero / Associated Press Inmates’ relatives trying to learn about their family members battle police in Tulua, Colombia.

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