Santa Fe New Mexican

Relatives demand answers after jail fire kills 68

- By Scott Smith

VALENCIA, Venezuela — It wasn’t long after Daniel Marquez’s family showed up at the Venezuelan police station jail where he’d been locked up for nearly a year awaiting trial when black smoke began billowing from the building.

Guards ordered them to flee, forcing them and other inmate relatives to watch in horror from afar as the flames quickly grew.

One day later, Marquez’s family took his blackened remains home in a simple wooden coffin, their despair as wide as the questions surroundin­g the blaze Wednesday that killed 68 people in one of Venezuela’s worst jail fires.

“He didn’t deserve to die like this,” Sorangel Gutierrez, Marquez’s sister-in-law, said as relatives wept before the casket of the 28-year-old father of two. His relatives say he was jailed because he couldn’t pay a bribe to an officer who found a photo of an illegal weapon on his cellphone.

Varying versions of exactly what happened inside the police station’s crowded jail cells circulated Thursday among relatives and human rights groups amid a deafening silence from officials, who have yet to provide a full account.

Marquez’s family said they received a call from him shortly before the fire claiming that guards were pouring gasoline in the cellblock, prompting them to rush to the police station detention center.

However, other accounts from survivors and victims’ relatives indicated it was the inmates themselves who set the blaze in order to escape.

President Nicolás Maduro has not made any statement about the fire and loss of life, instead posting a video on Twitter of an encounter with U.S. actor Danny Glover and reminding Venezuelan­s there are hundreds of beaches and churches around the country where they can spend Holy Week celebratio­ns.

The most substantia­l informatio­n authoritie­s have released so far came in a series of three tweets from chief prosecutor Tarek William Saab, who said late Wednesday that 66 men, as well as two women who were visiting the jail, were killed.

He said four prosecutor­s have been assigned to determine what happened and who was responsibl­e for the tragedy in Valencia, an industrial city in Carabobo state, 100 miles west of Caracas, the capital. He pledged a “thorough investigat­ion to immediatel­y shed light on the painful events that have put dozens of Venezuelan families in mourning.”

As Venezuela plummets into an economic crisis worse than the Great Depression, advocates say prisoners are facing especially dire conditions, going hungry in increasing­ly crowded cells. Inmates also frequently obtain weapons and drugs with the help of corrupt guards, and heavily armed groups control cellblock fiefdoms. “The negligence of authoritie­s continues, causing deaths,” the nongovernm­ental Venezuelan Prisons Observator­y, said in a statement.

The United Nations’ human rights office said it was “appalled at the horrific deaths” and urged Venezuela to quickly address concerns like judicial delays, the excessive use of pretrial detention and cramped quarters.

The death toll in Wednesday’s catastroph­e surpasses nearly every recent mass casualty event at Venezuelan prisons and jails. A fire at a prison in the western state of Zulia killed more than 100 inmates in 1994. In 2013, 61 people were killed and more than 100 injured, mostly from bullet wounds, after a riot in Barquisime­to.

Carlos Nieto, the director of A Window to Freedom, an organizati­on that monitors prison conditions, told The Associated Press that accounts from survivors and victims’ relatives indicate the fire in Valencia began when inmates tried to kidnap two guards. Later they reportedly set some mattresses on fire in an attempt to force guards to open up the cells so that they could escape.

Nieto said officers should have opened the cells once flames began spreading. “The ones that were rescued were saved because firefighte­rs opened a wall from behind to get them out,” he said.

An estimated 32,000 detainees are being kept in Venezuelan police stations that are filled far past capacity, according to the Venezuelan Prisons Observator­y. The jail at the site of Wednesday’s blaze was built for 35, but at the time of the fire, some 200 people were believed to be inside.

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Relatives are overcome Thursday after learning their loved ones died Wednesday in a fire that swept through a police station in Valencia, Venezuela.
ARIANA CUBILLOS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Relatives are overcome Thursday after learning their loved ones died Wednesday in a fire that swept through a police station in Valencia, Venezuela.

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