Venezuela arrests five cops over prison riot


FE Team | Published: April 01, 2018 11:21:47 | Updated: April 03, 2018 18:56:41


Mourners carry the coffin of Javier Rivas, one of the inmates who died during a riot and fire in the cells of the General Command of the Carabobo Police, during his funeral in Valencia, Venezuela March 29, 2018. Reuters.

Venezuela arrested five state police officials for their alleged role in a riot and fire that killed 68 people in an overcrowded police station cell, the country’s public prosecutor said on Saturday.

“The prosecutor’s office has issued arrest warrants for five officials of PoliCarabobo who have been signalled as responsible for the tragic incident that led to the death of 68 citizens in the cells of the headquarters of said regional police: THEY HAVE BEEN DETAINED #Justice,” tweeted prosecutor Tarek Saab. Saab, a former Socialist Party governor close to leftist President Nicolas Maduro, did not provide any further details on the cause of the disaster, the worst to affect Venezuela’s notoriously violent jails in over two decades.

Relatives of dead inmates and one surviving prisoner said there was a shoot-out with police on Wednesday morning in the jail in Carabobo state capital Valencia, reports Reuters.

One inmate’s widow said officials had doused the area with gasoline, which fuelled a fire through the small cells strung with hammocks and divided with sheets. There was no immediate comment from Carabobo state police.

Venezuela’s opposition blames the tragedy on Maduro’s inability to reform Venezuela’s lawless jails, where inmates strut around with weapons and orchestrate crimes from cells.

“The situation in detention centres and police jail cells in Venezuela is unacceptable!” said opposition lawmaker Miguel Pizarro.

Opposition politicians have also criticised the government for its long silence about the incident. Maduro’s administration only issued a statement late on Friday night expressing its condolences to relatives and the president has yet to publicly speak about the deaths.

A former bus driver and union leader who has grown widely unpopular, Maduro is running for re-election in a May election largely boycotted by the opposition.

With heavy use of state resources and a compliant electoral council, he is expected to win a six-year term despite salary-destroying hyperinflation, a fifth straight year of recession, and rampant crime.

State television focused on showing images of Venezuelans on the beach during the Easter holiday, while Maduro’s ministers also largely remained mum on the Valencia disaster.

But Delcy Rodriguez, the president of the pro-government legislative super body known as the constituent assembly, struck back at criticism of the government’s handling of the jail fire.

“We repudiate the use of Venezuelans’ pain as a political tool,” tweeted Rodriguez.

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