Fire kills 41 in overcrowded Indonesia prison block
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[September 08, 2021]
By Yuddy Cahya Budiman and Stanley Widianto
TANGERANG, Indonesia (Reuters) -A fire
killed 41 inmates in an overcrowded prison block in Indonesia's Banten
province on Wednesday, a government minister said, injuring scores more
in a blaze that police said may have been caused by an electrical fault.
The fire, the country's most deadly since 47 perished in a firework
factory disaster in 2017, broke out at 1.45 a.m. local time in a
Tangerang Prison block, said Indonesian law and human rights minister
Yasonna Laoly, after visiting the scene.
"We're working together with relevant authorities to look into the
causes of the fire and of course formulating prevention strategies so
that severe catastrophes like this won't happen again," the minister
said in a statement.
The minister said two of the dead were foreign nationals, one each from
South Africa and Portugal, and confirmed the prison was operating at
overcapacity when the fire broke out.
Cells were locked at the time, the minister said, but with the fire
raging uncontrollably, "some rooms couldn't be opened."
Earlier on Wednesday, Rika Aprianti, a spokeswoman for the ministry's
prison department, said 122 were being detained on drug-related offences
in a block built to hold 38.
Rika said all 41 fatalities were inmates, adding authorities were still
evacuating the facility as of 9.00 a.m. local time.
Prisons in Indonesia are notoriously overcrowded, with experts saying
the phenomenon is partly due to the emphasis on incarceration rather
than rehabilitation of those convicted of drug-related offences under
the country's strict narcotics laws.
On Wednesday morning local TV showed footage of flames engulfing the
detention facility, and later, the building's charred remains as victims
were pulled from the scene in orange body bags.
Dr. Hilwani from Tangerang General Hospital told Reuters that some of
the bodies had been so badly burned they were unidentifiable.
Another hospital official said some victims were in the ICU.
Nursin, a father of one of the victims, said at the prison that the
family could not afford to pay his 22-year-old child's legal expenses
before going to trial for a drug-related offence.
"We are poor...we couldn't free our child," he said, tearfully.
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Police officers load a bag containing the body of a victim of a
prison fire at a local hospital to send it to the police hospital
for identification following a fire overnight at an overcrowded jail
in Tangerang on the outskirts of Jakarta, Indonesia, September 8,
2021, in this photo taken by Antara Foto/Muhammad Iqbal/via REUTERS
Jakarta police spokesperson told broadcaster Metro TV
that 73 people had light injuries and the initial suspicion behind
the cause is "an electrical short circuit."
The electrical wiring at the prison had not been upgraded since the
1970s when the prison was built, minister Yasonna told Wednesday's
briefing.
The prison in Tangerang, an industrial and manufacturing hub on the
outskirts of Jakarta, housed more than 2,000 inmates in total, far
exceeding its 600 capacity, according to government data as of
September.
Leopold Sudaryono, a criminologist and PhD candidate at the
Australian National University, said that overcrowding also
complicated emergency evacuation efforts, given the limited staff
working at the prison.
"Fire detection efforts and evacuations are difficult," he said.
The head of the prison was not immediately available for comment on
the ratio of inmates to guards, nor the capacity of the facility.
Prison department spokeswoman Rika told local media that 13 guards
had been on duty at the facility at the time of the blaze.
There have been several deadly fires in Indonesia in recent years.
As well as the 2017 Tangerang fireworks factory blaze, a 2019 fire
at a matchstick factory in North Sumatra killed 30 people.
(Additional reporting by Agustinus Beo Da Costa, Fransiska Nangoy
and Johan Purnomo; Writing by Gayatri Suroyo and Kate Lamb; Editing
by Ed Davies, Kenneth Maxwell and Kim Coghill)
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