Matéria do jornal mais lido nos Estados Unidos critica declarações de governantes e desrespeito aos direitos humanos
A series of violent episodes at an
overcrowded prison, and video showing inmates gloating over three decapitation
victims during a riot there in December, are focusing scrutiny on the
deteriorating security situation in Maranhão State, the bastion of one of
Brazil’s most powerful political families.
Nearly 60 inmates were killed in 2013
at the Pedrinhas prison in Maranhão, an impoverished state governed by Roseana
Sarney, the daughter of former President José Sarney. A judge investigating
conditions at Pedrinhas said in December that the leaders of criminal gangs
operating in the prison were raping inmates’ wives during conjugal visits.
Security forces tried to assert control
at the end of December, prompting a brutal response by some inmates, who
apparently ordered retaliatory attacks on Friday outside the prison walls.
Gunfire was sprayed at a police station and at least four buses were burned in
the state capital, São Luís. A 6-year-old girl who was aboard one of the buses
died from burn injuries.
The graphic video of the decapitation
victims, who were killed during a riot at Pedrinhas on Dec. 17, was apparently
recorded by an inmate with a cellphone. The union representing prison workers
in Maranhão obtained the images and provided them to a leading Brazilian
newspaper, Folha de São Paulo, which made the video available on its website.
“You need to adjust the focus,” one
prisoner is heard telling another in the video, before the camera shows three
beheaded corpses on a blood-splattered floor.
Facing an outburst of criticism from
human rights groups over the conditions at the prison and an overall surge in
violent crime in Maranhão, Ms. Sarney’s administration issued a statement
lashing out at the newspaper for circulating the video, calling the move
“sensationalist.”
In an interview published on Sunday by
O Estado do Maranhão, a newspaper controlled by the Sarney family, Ms. Sarney
attributed the prison crisis to delays in the country’s legal system that
lengthen the time inmates spend in prison, and to prison guards’ resistance to
plans to change how Maranhão’s prisons are managed.
Officially, Pedrinhas has space for
1,700 inmates, but it currently has more than 2,200. In October, a battle
between rival gangs at the prison left 13 inmates dead. Brazil’s Justice Ministry
said on Wednesday that Maranhão had transferred 22 Pedrinhas inmates who were
deemed especially dangerous to federal prisons, in an attempt to regain control
of the facility.
Beyond the violence at Pedrinhas and
rights activists’ claims that the authorities have been slow to build new
prisons, Maranhão is struggling with a surge in homicides: Murders in São Luís
more than quintupled over the last decade. The ratio of police officers to
residents in Maranhão is among the lowest of any Brazilian state.
On Wednesday, the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights called for an investigation into the
prison violence there.
Brazilian human rights groups say the
violence at Pedrinhas could spread to other prisons. Brazil’s prison population
is among the world’s largest, with about 550,000 inmates after a surge in
incarcerations over the last two decades. The number of inmates has more than
quadrupled since the early 1990s, while the population has risen about 30
percent.
“The tragedy in Pedrinhas was foretold
and could be repeated at any time in other complexes facing the same problems,”
said Lucia Nader, executive director of Conectas, a Brazilian rights group.
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