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Dominican Republic prison fire kills 134
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-03-08 08:47

Rival gangs battling over the drug trade in an overcrowded, vermin-infested prison set their bedding ablaze and blocked the entrance to their cellblock, killing at least 134 inmates in one of Latin America's worst jailhouse blazes.

Some died in a stampede to escape the flames after guards forced open the jammed door in the cellblock known as Vietnam, one survivor said, while others were killed by smoke inhalation.

Prisoners survey the damage inside the public jail in Higuey, 103 miles to the east of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic on Monday, March 7, 2005 following a fire that killed at least 133 people. (AP Photo/Miguel Gomez)
Prisoners survey the damage inside the public jail in Higuey, 103 miles to the east of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic on Monday, March 7, 2005 following a fire that killed 134 people. [AP]
Only 26 prisoners were rescued from the jail in Higuey, 75 miles northeast of the capital on the eastern tip of the island, said National Police Chief Manuel de Jesus Perez Sanchez. Eighteen were injured.

The disaster underscored the terrible prison conditions in the Dominican Republic, which has the most overcrowded jails in the Western Hemisphere, according to U.N. figures. Domingo Porfirio Rojas-Nina of the Dominican National Human Rights Commission said he has been complaining for years that the Higuey prison "is the worst in the country. It is hell on earth. It is unfit for human beings."

Flames of fire. Fire raged through a prison in the Dominican Republic following a dawn riot, killing at least 134 people and injuring 26 more, authorities said.(AFP/File/Mustafa Ozer)
Flames of fire. Fire raged through a prison in the Dominican Republic following a dawn riot, killing at least 134 people and injuring 26 more, authorities said. [AFP/File]
Officials gave varying figures for the prison population, with one saying Vietnam cellblock held as many as 182. The confusion over the exact numbers illustrated some of the problems of the prison system.

Among the victims were four Americans from Puerto Rico convicted of cocaine trafficking. Two died and two were injured, officials said.

The violence began when one inmate shot and wounded another Sunday night and dozens of members of three gangs began fighting for control of who would sell drugs and cigarettes, said the national prison director, Gen. Ramon de la Cruz Martinez.

Guards broke up that fight, but early Monday, prisoners began rioting, setting fire to pillows and sheets and blocking the entrance, officials said.

"It's an incredible, mad thing," said chief firefighter Nestor Vera. Bodies were "piled up on top of each other" at the door, he said, apparently as the men struggled to escape.

One of the few to escape, Alexander Sanchez, said police fired tear gas before the fire began.

"When they finally opened the door, we all tried to get out but we didn't all make it, some got trampled to death," said Sanchez, 28, who has been waiting in jail two years to be tried for beating up a man in a dispute over a woman.

Scores of relatives gathered outside the jail.

"I just want to find out if he's still alive," Porfirio Rodriguez, 52, said of his son, Ramon, who was convicted of smuggling migrants to Puerto Rico.

Police directed Rodriguez to a nearby photocopy shop, where people paid nearly a dollar for the list of victims. Rodriguez bought his and walked away to read it in private. His son was listed among the dead.

"We are truly shattered and I have spoken earlier with the president who told me to let the people of Higuey know of his profound dismay of this tragedy," said Vice President Rafael Alburquerque, who is acting president while Leonel Fernandez is in Spain attending an anti-terrorism conference.

The blaze would be investigated by a five-member commission, Alburquerque said.

Gang fights, escapes and riots erupt frequently at prisons across the region.

The Dominican Republic's 35 prisons were built for 9,000 prisoners but last year held more than 13,500, according to a State Department human rights report published last week.

The Vietnam block had a maximum capacity for 25 inmates and was so overcrowded that people slept on top of toilets.

At Luis Eduardo Aybar Hospital, survivor Enrique Wilano, 27, said many were killed in the cellblock.

"They (members of one gang) didn't want us to leave. Everybody who tried to get to the door got shot or hit with a machete," said Wilano, who was shot in the shoulder and slashed with a machete across the cheek.

Austacia Guerrero, the mother of one prisoner, said the inmates didn't have a chance. "They're like sardines in there. They can't move, so how are they going to get out?" she said.

She spoke outside the hospital where officials had brought the bodies.

"If he's here, I can't find him or identify him. All these bodies are burned," said 55-year-old Guerrero.

Monday's fire had one of the highest tolls recorded in decades in the region. Last year, at least 103 prisoners died in a May prison riot and fire in San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Officials blamed a short circuit, but gangs also allege that rival inmates threw gasoline into the cells.

In the Dominican Republic, 30 people died in September 2002 at La Vega prison after mattresses were set ablaze in the facility built for 50 but housing 600.

Higuey is a city in the wide coastal lowland of the southeastern Dominican Republic. Founded in 1502 by Juan Ponce de Leon, Higuey has long been a pilgrimage site known for its elaborate shrine of the Virgin Mary.



 
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