A fight between rival gangs at a women’s prison in Honduras on Tuesday quickly escalated into a riot that killed dozens of inmates.
The riot at the prison in Tamara, around 30 miles outside the capital city of Tegucigalpa, started after rival gangs Barrio 18 and MS-13 clashed inside the facility early Tuesday morning.
Sandra Rodríguez Vargas, the assistant commissioner for Honduras’ prison system, said attackers cleared out security guards at 8 a.m. Tuesday then opened gates to an adjoining cell block. The women started a fire and started massacring the other inmates with weapons.
Honduran President Xiomara Castro decried the “monstrous murder” of 46 inmates, which she blamed on street gangs. Authorities found dozens of bodies after the fighting subsided, with some of the victims believed to have no ties to either of the gangs that instigated the incident.
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Yuri Mora, the spokesman for Honduras’ national police investigation agency, said that 26 inmates had burned to death, while the remainder died from gunshot wounds or stabbings. At least seven inmates received treatment at a hospital in the capital, with most of them dying later in the day.
Castro promised her government would take “drastic measures” after determining that the riot was “planned by maras (street gangs) with the knowledge and acquiescence of security authorities.” Officials did not have any answer as to how the gangs managed to smuggle weapons into the prison.
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Other women died from fires, Castro said, stressing that she stands in “solidarity with the families.” Castro promised additional efforts to “combat organized crime and dismantle the boycott against security fostered from inside prisons.”
The riot now accounts for the deadliest one at a female prison detention center in Central America since 2017, when a fire set at a Guatemala prison killed 41 girls. The worst such disaster in Honduras killed 361 inmates during a fire in 2012.
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Officials described the deaths as a “terrorist act” but admitted that the gangs control some parts of the prison, as well as other prisons across the country.
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Julissa Villanueva, head of the country’s penal system, speculated that the riot occurred in response to government raids on prisons across the country that tried to pull control from powerful gangs and remove security guards taking bribes to help them.
Villanueva promised that the government would “not back down” from these efforts despite the significant resistance they face.
Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to this report.