Around 6,000 inmates have fled a high-security prison in Mozambique’s capital Maputo after a rebellion, the country’s police chief said, amid post-election riots
A mass jail break has seen at least 6,000 people escape from a maximum security facility – leaving 33 prisoners dead and 15 others injured after violent clashes with security forces.
Inmates escaped from the jail in Mozambique’s capital Maputo on Christmas Day after a rebellion, the country’s police chief said, as widespread post-election riots and violence tear through the country.
Police chief Bernardino Rafael said 33 prisoners died and 15 others were injured during a confrontation with the security forces. The prisoners fled during violent protests that have seen police cars, stations and infrastructure destroyed after the country’s Constitutional Council confirmed the ruling Frelimo party as the winner of the Oct. 9 elections.
The escape from the Maputo Central Prison, located around 9 miles southwest of the capital, started around midday on Wednesday after “agitation” by a “group of subversive protesters” nearby, Rafael said. Violence has engulfed Mozambique since the country’s highest court confirmed ruling Frelimo party presidential candidate Daniel Chapo as the winner of disputed Oct. 9 elections on Monday.
Some of the prisoners at the facility snatched weapons from the guards and started freeing other detainees. Rafael added: “A curious fact is that in that prison we had 29 convicted terrorists, who they released. We are worried, as a country, as Mozambicans, as members of the defence and security forces.”
“They (protesters) were making noise, demanding that they be able to remove the prisoners who are there serving their sentences”, said Rafael, adding that the protests led to the collapse of a wall, allowing the prisoners to flee. He called on the escaped prisoners to surrender to authorities and for the population to be informed about the fugitives.
Videos on social media show the moment inmates left the prison, while other recordings reveal captures made by military personnel and prison guards. Many prisoners tried to hide in homes, but some were unsuccessful and ended up being detained again. And in another video, a prisoner still with handcuffs on his right wrist says he was held n the disciplinary section of the prison and was released by other inmates.
Mozambique’s Interior Minister Pascoal Ronda told a news conference in Maputo late Tuesday that the violence was led by mostly youthful supporters of losing candidate Venancio Mondlane, who received 24% of the vote, second to Chapo, who got 65%.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is concerned at the violence and urges all political leaders and relevant parties “to defuse tensions including through meaningful dialogue (and) legal redress,” U.N. associate spokesperson Stephanie Tremblay said Thursday. The chief has also called for a stop to the violence and redoubled efforts “to seek a peaceful resolution to the ongoing crisis,” she said