56 inmates massacred in riot at Brazil prison

The wife of a prisoner who was killed in a riot cries outside Anisio Jobim Penitentiary Complex in Manaus, Brazil. Picture: Edmar Barros/Futura Press via AP

The wife of a prisoner who was killed in a riot cries outside Anisio Jobim Penitentiary Complex in Manaus, Brazil. Picture: Edmar Barros/Futura Press via AP

Published Jan 4, 2017

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Manaus - Brazil's justice minister

on Tuesday proposed an overhaul of the penal system to tackle

chronic prison overcrowding a day after 56 inmates were

massacred in the deadliest riot in two decades.

The minister, Alexandre de Moraes, said Brazil needed to

improve conditions in jails, which are home to an estimated

600 000 inmates, after visiting the prison in the jungle city of

Manaus where violence erupted between rival drug gangs.

In an incident that shocked even Brazilians inured to

regular outbreaks of prison violence, machete-wielding gangs

decapitated inmates on Monday and threw their bodies over a wall

of the penitentiary, which houses more than three times its

capacity.

Hundreds of anguished relatives, hugging each other and

sobbing uncontrollably, gathered outside the morgue in Manaus,

waiting to discover if their loved ones were alive.

A morgue employee emerged from time to time to read from a

list of those confirmed dead.

"I never imagined something like this could happen," cried

Diana after learning that her son Ronei Pinheiro had been

killed.

"Please help me bury my son."

Officials were forced to rent a refrigerated truck to store

bodies, while medical examiners tried to identify the remains.

A war for control of the lucrative drug trade fuelled the

latest gang violence in Brazil's understaffed prisons, raising

concerns that Monday's massacre could unleash a wave of

reprisals.

Some 223 inmates from other prisons in Amazonas state were

relocated to an abandoned jail in Manaus to protect them from

rival gangs following the riot.

Moraes said the solution to Brazil's chronic prison violence

was not just to keep opening new prisons.

"We need to make sure those who deserve to be in jail stay

there and those who committed minor crimes get out," Moraes told

reporters after visiting the Anisio Jobim penitentiary. "If not,

we are only providing organised crime groups with new soldiers."

The minister said 42 percent of inmates in Brazil's prisons

were awaiting trial, versus a global average of just 20 percent.

The prison system is among the worst in the world, according to

human rights groups.

Smoke rises from the Anisio Jobim Prison Complex during a riot, in Manaus, northern Brazil. Picture: Xinhua/A CRITICA

Overcrowding and violence are common, and rights groups

describe medieval conditions with food scarce and cells so

packed that prisoners have no space to lie down.

Brazil's federal government will provide 1.2 billion reais

($367.82 million) to states by June to beef up security and buy

more X-ray machines to prevent weapons from entering prisons,

Moraes said.

The prison system in Amazonas state is run by two private

companies that won a 27-year public contract.

The massacre in Manaus occurred when members of a local

criminal gang known as North Family, which controls the Anisio

Jobim prison complex, attacked inmates from the rival First

Capital Command (PCC), security officials said.

A video seen by Reuters, whose authenticity could not be

verified, showed prisoners tapping the decapitated heads of four

men with knifes and yelling: "These are all PCC."

The riot was the deadliest since a 1992 prison massacre at

the Carandiru prison in Sao Paulo state in which 111 inmates

were killed.

Amnesty International called on Brazil to launch an

independent investigation to bring those responsible to justice.

Police erected roadblocks and increased patrols around

Manaus to hunt down more than 100 inmates who escaped from the

prison during the 17-hour riot.

Sergio Fontes, security chief for Amazonas state, said he

could request help from federal security forces if need be, but

so far the situation was under control.

State police and army officials who were on holiday were

recalled to help look for the escaped inmates, state news

representatives said in a statement.

According to state officials, 54 inmates had been recaptured

by Tuesday afternoon.

One inmate had posted a selfie of himself and other

prisoners on his Facebook account shortly after they escaped by

tearing down a wall.

Reuters

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