Official video showed hundreds of shirtless male inmates, many
tattooed and with their heads shaved, arranged on the floor of
Honduras' high-security Tamara prison with their arms over their
heads, guarded by heavily armed soldiers.
The images show similarities to ones shared earlier this year by
neighboring right-wing El Salvador's government, which has
beefed up prison security and locked up more than 62,000 alleged
criminals during a crackdown on gangs.
"Our mission is to defeat organized crime inside the prisons and
we are (also) going after the intellectual authors operating
from outside," Defense Minister Jose Manuel Zelaya said in a
tweet.
Tamara, where some 4,200 inmates are crammed into a facility
with a capacity to accommodate 2,500, is one of two prisons,
along with La Tolva, that the military police assumed control
over on Monday, Armed Forces spokesperson Antonio Coello said.
In Honduras, some 20,000 inmates coexist in 26 overcrowded
prisons, with a United Nations report saying that the country's
prisons are 34.2% over capacity.
Military police on Monday seized pistols, machine guns,
ammunition, magazines and grenades from an area of the Tamara
prison occupied by the Barrio 18 gang, Colonel Fernando Munoz
told reporters.
"The corruption in the prisons is over. We are going to control
it and there will be no calls coming out of here to order
extortions or executions," the officer said in a press
conference.
(Reporting by Gustavo Palencia in Tegucigalpa; Writing by
Valentine Hilaire; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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