Honduras’ Deadly Prison Fire: History Repeats Itself With Tragic And Fateful Dividends

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By Melissa Beale and Alex Gibson

When a horrific fire broke out in a Honduran prison on Tuesday night, the 350-plus inmates trapped in the blaze received what was tantamount to their de facto death sentences, well beyond what their original sentences might have been. While the blaze in this particular case seemed to be caused by a mattress purposely lit on fire, it was a catastrophe long in the waiting, and could have been just as well witnessed in scores of prisons throughout Honduras, or in the rest of Central America. The facility that went up in flames was located in the town of Comayagua, just north of the capital city of Tegucigalpa. According to numerous eye witnesses, the gruesome scene was pierced by screams from dozens of inmates who were trapped behind bars while security guards desperately fumbled in search of the keys. According to local firefighters, about a hundred prisoners burned to death or suffocated in their cells.

Honduras
Honduras

What floods are to Bangladesh, and what Tsunamis are to Malaysia, prison nightmares like the one at Comayagua on Tuesday can be plotted with grim regularity and are normally attributable to corruption, underfunding, and total indifference to the plight of prisoners. In the case of this Honduran fire, the metaphorical tinder was gathered and waiting to be ignited in that country by a series of contributing events. These include the breakdown of Honduran society as a result of the US-pressured “Contra” cause during the Reagan Administration. Specifically, this latest incident was in part the result of the then United States ambassador to Honduras, John Negroponte, validating the formation of a Honduran death squad to kill Honduran citizens opposed to their country being used as an unsinkable aircraft carrier in that conflict. Of course, when he appeared before the Senate years later while standing to be appointed as United States ambassador to the United Nations, he appeared to suffer total amnesia on his role Central American role. Also to be blamed was the U.S. policy of deporting Hondurans back to their native land from American prisons, where they found themselves jailed in inadequate facilities and had plenty of time to plot their new lives of crime back in their homelands.

History Repeats Itself

This prison fire has not been the first to occur in the Central American country. In 2004, more than a hundred incarcerated gang members were also killed in a jail blaze, while in 2003, a fire in a nearby facility killed another seventy gang members. Prison riots, fires, and other deadly episodes have plagued the country dating back to 1994 when one particularly ghastly fire broke out in an overcrowded prison and took the lives of 103 inmates. This dilemma seemed to not only affect Honduras, but generated a good deal of outrage throughout Central America as well as elsewhere in much of the region. COHA Research Fellow W. Alex Sanchez was interviewed yesterday on the Honduran incendiary calamity by Telemundo in which he dealt with cases of prison riots and fires dating back to 2010. In that incident, a prison in El Salvador witnessed a fire that killed sixteen prisoners and left twenty-two injured.

Latin American prisons, like those in Honduras, are inevitably congested, grimy, and wretchedly equipped with a serious lack in security equipment, ammunition, uniforms and trained manpower to control and guard the facilities from troublemakers. For example, prisons in Honduras that were designed for approximately 6,000 inmates today hold more than double that (12,500). Also, according to a prison administrator’s figures, a Venezuelan prison known as “La Planta” was built for 350 prisoners, but now holds an alarming 2,436 people. It has been established that many incarcerated criminals throughout the region, particularly in Honduras, are habitually forced to sleep on the floor in filthy conditions.

Regional Perspective

Despite the financial boom that several countries like Brazil and Peru have enjoyed throughout the past decade, much of Latin America is still severely impoverished, where regional governments have to deal with extremely limited financial resources. Low priorities, as a result, are routinely awarded to social sector development projects such as infrastructure, and the grossly inadequate construction of schools and hospitals. Prisons are therefore pushed to the back of the list due to the penal system’s weak lobbying position. Along with failing schools and hospitals, violence is increasing and living conditions found in such facilities are abysmal. With riots and fires occurring with grim regularity, hundreds of once incarcerated criminals now roam the streets, adding to the security threat affecting citizens. Such incidents have been occurring for decades, in which thousands of the incarcerated are losing their lives and where justice is rarely blind, but sadly predictable.

On the bright side, however, countries like Peru have decided to shift their focus to tackle the problem of unsafe prisons. For instance, the Peruvian government has decided to grant USD 12 million to Peru’s National Penitentiary Institute (INPE) in order to help improve the maintenance in five of the country’s most troubled jails, after the country experienced a particularly costly prison calamity.

A Symptom of a Larger Social Crisis

The inhumane conditions in many Honduran prisons can be seen as a symptom of a larger social crisis in a country that the United Nations in 2010 labeled as the murder capital of the world. According to The New York Times, the Central American nation is home to world’s highest murder rate of “82.1 per 100,000 residents, far ahead of the worldwide rate of 6.9.” Rampant rates of violence and crime are inevitably the results of a broken political system. Government institutions are still trying to recover from a 2009 coup, where a largely corrupt police force has become a generous contributor to the murder rate and the sense of lawlessness throughout the country, and where organized crime dominates much of society. Poorly maintained and over-crowded prisons are only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the key issues plaguing Honduras, and the surrounding region. The only possible silver lining to Tuesday night’s hellish scene is that it may now add to the growing evidence of the unacceptable and perilous state of Honduran prisons.

Melissa Beale and Alex Gibson are COHA Research Associates

COHA

COHA, or Council on Hemispheric Affairs, was founded in 1975, the Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA), a nonprofit, tax-exempt independent research and information organization, was established to promote the common interests of the hemisphere, raise the visibility of regional affairs and increase the importance of the inter-American relationship, as well as encourage the formulation of rational and constructive U.S. policies towards Latin America.

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