Martha Mendoza and Mark Stevenson, Associated Press, Comayagua, Honduras | Fri, 02/17/2012 7:20 AM
Deadliest prison blaze: Forensic workers begin the process of identifying bodies as they are unloaded from a truck at the morgue in Tegucigalpa, Honduras on Thursday (Friday Jakarta time). Hundreds of bodies of inmates that died in a fire at the prison in the city of Comayagua began arriving to the capital city for identification, which authorities said could take weeks. (AP/Fernando Antonio)
Six guards, 800-plus prisoners in 10 cellblocks, one set of keys. The
numbers spelled disaster when fire tore through a prison and 355 people died,
many yet to even be charged with a crime, much less convicted.
The deadliest prison blaze in a century has exposed just how deep
government dysfunction and confusion go in Honduras, a small Central American
country with the world's highest murder rate.
Prisoners' scorched bodies were being brought to the capital of
Tegucigalpa on Thursday for identification, a process authorities said could
take weeks. Dozens of family members gathered outside the morgue wearing
surgical masks against the strong smell of death as police called out the names
of the few less-charred victims who had been identified.
Most relatives said they didn't believe the authorities' account that
a prisoner set a mattress on fire late Tuesday after threatening to burn down
Comayagua prison, located 55 miles (90 kilometers) north of Tegucigalpa.
They also faulted prison officials for failing to get help inside
quickly as flames engulfed the facility. Hundreds of screaming men burned and
suffocated inside their locked cells as rescuers desperately searched for keys.
"Those who lock up the prisoners are in charge of their welfare.
Why couldn't they open the doors?" said a weeping Manuela Alvardo, whose
34-year-old son died. He was to have been released in May after serving a
murder sentence.
"It couldn't have been a mattress fire. This guy wasn't alone. He
was in a crowded cell. The other prisoners wouldn't have allowed that to
happen. They would have put out the fire."
From the time firefighters received a call at 10:59 p.m., the rescue
was marred by human error and conditions inside the prison that led to
catastrophe.
Only six guards were on duty, four in towers overlooking the prison
and two in the facility itself, said Fidel Tejeda, who was assigned to a tower
that night. One of the guards posted inside held all the keys to the prison
doors, he said.
Tejeda said he fired two shots as a warning when he first saw flames
about 10:50 p.m., but he said prison rules prevented him from leaving his post
to help evacuate the 852 prisoners.
"It would be a criminal act," Tejeda said Thursday, standing
in uniform outside the prison, rifle in hand.
Survivors said they watched helplessly as the guard who had the keys
fled without unlocking their cells.
"He threw the keys on the floor in panic," said Hector
Daniel Martinez, who was being held as a homicide suspect.
Martinez said an inmate who was not locked in because he also worked
as a nurse picked up the keys and, braving the scorching heat, went from one
cell block to another, opening doors.
"He went into the flames and started breaking the locks,"
said Jose Enrique Guevara, who was five years into an 11-year sentence for auto
theft. "He saved us, I tell you."
Guevara said the nurse could get only a handful of the keys and had to
use a bench to break the lock of the cellblock where the fire started.
But by that time, it was already too late for hundreds of prisoners.
Inside the prison Thursday, charred walls and debris showed the path
of the fire, which burned through 10 barracks that had been crammed with 70 to
105 inmates, sleeping in bunk beds piled four high and reaching to the ceiling.
Bodies were piled in the bathrooms, where inmates apparently fled to
the showers, hoping the water would save them from blistering flames. Prisoners
perished clutching each other in bathtubs and curled up in laundry sinks.
"It was something horrible," said survivor Eladio Chica.
"I saw flames, and when we got out, men were being burned, up against the
bars. They were stuck to them."
Miguel Angel Lopez, a guard on duty inside the prison, said he called
the fire brigade as soon as he saw the blaze, but it took firefighters 30 minutes
to get inside.
Fire officials told The Associated Press they were blocked from
entering the prison for half an hour by guards who thought they had a riot or
breakout on their hands.
"This tragedy could have been averted or at least not been so
catastrophic if there had been an emergency system in all the penitentiaries in
the country," human rights prosecutor German Enamorado told HRN Radio.
Honduras has been the site of two other major prison fires, in 2003
and 2004, that killed a total of 176 inmates. Government officials were
convicted of wrongdoing in the 2003 blaze.
The U.N. recently named Honduras as the country with the world's
highest murder rate, with 82 homicides per 100,000, much of it related to drug
trafficking and street gangs. That's almost five times higher than Mexico,
where drug-related deaths are rampant. The U.S. recently pulled its Peace Corps
workers from the country for security reasons.
The U.S. State Department has criticized the Honduran government for
harsh prison conditions, citing severe overcrowding, malnutrition, and lack of
adequate sanitation.
Howard Berman, then-chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Foreign
Affairs, questioned U.S. aid to Honduras last fall, saying human rights abuses
involving security forces had "reached a distressing pitch."
"The most chilling aspect of this rather gruesome set of problems
is that U.S. government assistance is flowing into the thick of it,"
Berman wrote to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton.
A Honduran government report obtained by the AP said 57 percent of the
inmates at Comayagua had not been convicted of any crime, but were either
awaiting trial or being held as suspected gang members.
This is not unusual. Nationwide, more than half of the 11,000 inmates
in the country's 24 prisons are awaiting trial, as yet unconvicted. Every
prison is crammed with more people than it was built for, and there's rarely
enough food. Prisoners are beaten and tortured, and gangs control the inside
because there is, on average, just one guard for every 65 prisoners.
The records show that authorities routinely confiscate marijuana and
crack, handmade weapons and cell phones at Comayagua, where prisoners grow corn
and beans and raise chickens on the 36 acres of farmland surrounding the
facility.
During a recent review, Comayagua's electrical system was in order,
and drinking water was available. But the air and ventilation systems were
listed as insufficient, and the report says prisoners were not informed of
their rights.
There was no doctor assigned to the prison, no psychological services
and, unlike many other Honduran prisons, no system that allowed prisoners to
earn privileges.
Honduran authorities said they are still investigating other possible
causes of the fire, including that it could have been set in collusion with
guards to stage a prison break.
"All of this isn't confirmed, but we're looking into it,"
said attorney general's spokesman Melvin Duarte.
The Interamerican Court on Humans Rights issued a report in 2006
recommending measures to avoid prison overcrowding and training and equipment
to deal with emergencies and evacuations after the fires in 2003 and 2004. It
issued another critical report in 2010 noting that none of the changes had been
made.
National prison system director Danilo Orellana declined to comment on
the supervision or the crowded conditions at Comayagua, referring questions to
the prison police commander, who did not respond to an AP request late
Wednesday.
President Porfirio Lobo on Wednesday suspended Orellana and other top
prison officials.
On Thursday morning, officials continued their investigation at the
prison, where murals of Catholic saints, Jesus Christ and psalms stand out in
an otherwise miserable place. Two palm trees flanked the front entrance where a
sign read: "Let there be justice, even if the world perishes."
The State Department said
it was sending Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
investigators to Honduras. The team will include forensic chemists, explosives
enforcement officers and dogs that can sniff out explosives and accelerants.