San Antonio Express-News

MS-13 blamed for ordering fatal Honduras prison riots

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TEGUCIGALP­A, Honduras — A top security official in Honduras said Monday the Mara Salvatruch­a gang ordered prison riots that had killed 37 inmates since Friday.

Assistant Security Minister Luis Suazo said the gang known as MS-13 staged the bloody riots to force the government to back down from emergency measures decreed last week.

“We have informatio­n that the MS is behind this and gave the orders to carry out these attacks,” said Suazo. “The ones who started the attacks were, in all of the cases, MS members.”

Last Tuesday, the federal government declared a state of emergency throughout the National Prison System, aimed at cutting down weapons in prisons with measures like and reducing visiting hours.

Suazo said the emergency decree “broke the bonds that they (the gang) had establishe­d with many prison officers who allowed them to operate” illicit businesses inside prison walls.

The death toll in a riot Sunday at the maximum security prison in the municipali­ty of El Porvenir, about 70 miles from the Honduran capital of Tegucigalp­a, rose to 18. On Friday, prisoners battled each other at a prison in the city of Tela, leaving a total of 19 dead.

Corruption has allowed inmates to basically run some areas of the prisons, smuggling guns and knives and operating their own businesses.

“The inmates run businesses inside prisons in conjunctio­n with prison authoritie­s, and they have enough money to basically act like banks,” said security analyst Raul Pineda Alvarado.

The government created a National Inter-agency Security Force, made up of the military and the National Police, to run the prison system, and it quickly announced drastic measures, like suspending visits and investigat­ing corrupt prison guards.

But those measures — combined with poor conditions and tremendous overcrowdi­ng — created a wave of rage among inmates. An inmate who contacted the HCH television station said prisoners were not going to accept the suspension of family visits, and said the violence would continue until conditions improved.

Pineda Alvarado said the violence behind bars “is the logical, natural consequenc­e of a system that is based on corruption and incompeten­ce.”

For example, in the riots on Friday and Sunday, many of the victims were killed with pistols or machetes smuggled into the prisons.

Prisoners — and especially the members of the MS gang — basically dominate some prisons, creating tensions with incarcerat­ed members of the rival Barrio 18 gang.

“This inevitably creates conflicts that happen in a coordinate­d way in several prisons,” said Pineda Alvarado. “If corrective actions are not taken, the killings are going to continue and they (the prisons) will continue to be universiti­es of crime and violence.”

Cleaning up the country’s 29 prisons — whose population doubled between 2012 and 2019 — will be a huge task.

Col. Jose Gonzalez Maradiaga, who heads the Interagenc­y Security Force, told local news media the first step would be to suspend prison guards and subject them to investigat­ion.

 ?? Photos by Elmer Martinez / Associated Press ?? On Monday, men place the coffin of their family member Dionisio Heriberto Solis, one of the prisoners who died the previous day in a riot inside El Porvenir prison, into a hearse in Tegucigalp­a, Honduras.
Photos by Elmer Martinez / Associated Press On Monday, men place the coffin of their family member Dionisio Heriberto Solis, one of the prisoners who died the previous day in a riot inside El Porvenir prison, into a hearse in Tegucigalp­a, Honduras.
 ??  ?? A woman sits behind the coffin of Mario Pavon, one of the prisoners who died during a riot, as his remains are carried away by family members in a truck.
A woman sits behind the coffin of Mario Pavon, one of the prisoners who died during a riot, as his remains are carried away by family members in a truck.

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