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Nine Killed, Two Decapitated, 100 escape, in Brazil’s Latest Prison Riot

Prisoners get medical after a rebellion at the Colônia Agroindustrial prison in Goiânia

At least nine people have died in clashes between rival gangs in one of Brazil’s chronically overcrowded prisons. The South American country’s penitentiary system is beset by violence, riots and mass breakouts.

Clashes erupted at about 2 p.m. local time Monday when inmates from one wing of the Colônia Agroindustrial prison in the Aparecida de Goiânia Complex in the city of Goiânia broke into another wing.

Mattresses were set on fire before special police units — the Special Penitentiary Operations Group — were brought in to restore security. The fires burned the bodies of those killed, authorities said.

“It was not an act of escape, it was not exactly a rebellion, but one wing against another,” Edson Costa Araújo, superintendent of the secretary of public security in the central state of Goiás, said in a statement reported by the O Estado de São Paulo newspaper.

At least two of the people killed were reportedly decapitated. Some 14 people were injured, the Folha de São Paulo newspaper reported, quoting security officials.

Jorimar Bastos, the chief of the state prison guard union, told Folha that five prison officers were on duty on January 1 and were responsible for 900 prisoners, the news agency Reuters reported.

About 100 inmates also broke out of the prison and 77 were still at large on Monday evening.

The families of prisoners gathered at the gates of the prison in search of information.

Prisons in a Chronic Bad Shape

Rival gangs often fight for supremacy in Brazil’s overcrowded prisons. More than 120 people were killed in 2017 in prison clashes. A year ago, a prison riot at the Anisio Jobim Penitentiary Complex in Amazonas state left 56 people dead.

International human rights organizations have repeatedly denounced the Brazilian prison system as one of the worst and most inhumane in the world, with overcrowding, unhealthy conditions in some prisons , as well as mistreatment and torture.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in its annual report that the crisis in the Brazilian penitentiary system is “a tragedy ” and that the situation in many prisons is close to the “Middle Ages.”

According to the latest data from the Ministry of Justice, the prison population in Brazil reached 726,712, an increase of 104,000 people since 2014, making it the third-largest prison population in absolute numbers in the world, behind the United States and China.

DW

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