One dead, 5 injured in new Brazil prison uprising

Heavily armed police officers walk outside the Agricultural Penitentiary of Monte Cristo, after dozens of inmates were killed, in Boa Vista, Roraima state, Brazil. File picture: Rodrigo Sales/Futura Press via AP

Heavily armed police officers walk outside the Agricultural Penitentiary of Monte Cristo, after dozens of inmates were killed, in Boa Vista, Roraima state, Brazil. File picture: Rodrigo Sales/Futura Press via AP

Published Jan 19, 2017

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Rio de Janeiro - At least one inmate was

killed when members of different Brazilian drug gangs clashed at

a northeastern prison overnight, authorities said on Thursday,

part of a surge in gang violence in prisons that has killed

around 140 in less than three weeks.

Prisoners fought, burnt mattresses and ripped down part of

the roof in one of the blocks of the Caico prison in the state

of Rio Grande do Norte before being suppressed by guards, a

spokesperson for the state's security secretariat said.

Five inmates were injured in the clashes.

Hours earlier heavily armed police entered another prison in

Rio Grande do Norte to separate warring factions, whose clashes

in recent days killed 26 inmates.

Brazil has been hit by a wave of deadly gang clashes in

prisons in the north and northeast regions since the start of

the year. At least 140 inmates have been killed in the violence,

many decapitated or mutilated.

The clashes are the result of a split between Brazil's most

powerful drug gang, the First Capital Command, or PCC, and the

second-most powerful gang, the Rio de Janeiro-based Red Command.

The disturbances began on Jan. 1 with a clash in a Manaus

prison in Amazonas state where the powerful North Family gang

killed 56 inmates, mostly PCC members.

The North Family largely controls a cocaine drug route along

the Solimoes River in the Amazon that flows into Colombia and

Peru, the world's top two cocaine-producing nations.

The PCC retaliated five days later by killing 33 inmates at

the Monte Cristo prison in the Amazonian state of Roraima.

Reuters

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