SANTIAGO – Fire engulfed a prison in the Chilean capital early yesterday, killing 83 inmates and critically injuring 14 others, the government said. It was the worst ever accident in the country’s jail system.
Officials said the fire was deliberately started during an early morning fight between inmates in one of the crowded prison’s five towers. Television footage showed part of the San Miguel prison in flames, with black smoke billowing from the building.
Frantic relatives of the inmates flooded to the prison walls, screaming and imploring police to let them in to rescue their loved ones. Officials afterwards began informing the families of those killed.
“It is exasperating not to know if they are alive or dead. We have been here for hours, and they haven’t told us anything,” said one woman called Maria, declining to give her surname.
Some relatives screamed when officials read out lists of some prisoners who had survived the blaze, assuming those not included were dead. Officials stressed that the lists were only partial. Some relatives threw rocks and glass bottles and scuffled with police.
“It is a hugely painful tragedy,” President Sebastian Pinera said, confirming that the death toll had risen to 83. “We cannot keep living with a prison system which is absolutely inhumane,” he added, citing chronic overcrowding in the country’s jails. “We are going to speed up the process to ensure our country has a humane, dignified prison system that befits a civilised country.”
The incident is the latest in a string of disasters and accidents to hit Chile this year, including a devastating February earthquake and ensuing tsunamis and a mine collapse that ultimately produced a happy ending when 33 miners were rescued after two months below ground.
Justice minister Felipe Bulnes said the prison housed 1,960 inmates, nearly twice the 1,100 inmate capacity. Radio station Bio Bio reported that around 200 inmates had to be evacuated into a jail yard due to the fire, which a local state prosecutor said was started deliberately. – (Reuters)