
Inmates at a notorious Brazilian jail that
was the scene of murderous infighting between rival drug gangs last
week have boasted of having a barbecue with human flesh in this
disturbing footage.
The prisoners
gloated as they showed off pieces of meat on a skewer over a bonfire and
claimed they were toasting the remains of a rival.
The
video was recorded at the Alcacuz prison which was the scene of
gruesome violence between two rival gangs last weekend when 26 inmates
were massacred, most of them beheaded.
Military
police were only able to restore some semblance of control at the
prison, in the north-eastern city on Natal, on Saturday.
They
are now desperately trying to separate rival gangs by building a wall
of shipping containers as Brazil's prisons descend into chaos.
The prisoners filmed preparing the
barbecue were said to belong to an Amazon drug cartel called the Family
of the North and a Rio de Janeiro-based drugs gang called the Red
Command.
The man whose meat they
claimed to be barbecuing was said to be a member of the First Capital
Command (PCC) based in Sao Paulo which kept the peace for years with the
Red Command before their loose alliance fell apart last year and
resulted in the spate of prison killings.
One of the bare-chested prisoners recorded
on film, who made no attempt to hide his face, shouted repeatedly:
'Churrasco do PCC', meaning 'PCC Steak.'
Another
inmate, who was brandishing a machete-style knife and had several front
teeth missing, said: 'And this is only the beginning.'
Pointing towards the meat on a skewer, he chillingly added: 'Today it was us and they paid.'
One of the men even made a 'V' for 'Victory' sign to the mobile phone that recorded the footage.
The overcrowded prisons in Brazil are now
the battleground in a quickly escalating war between the PCC and the Red
Command, the nation's two biggest drug gangs.
For
two decades, the two factions maintained a working relationship,
ensuring a steady flow of drugs and arms over Brazil's porous border.
But about six months ago, the PCC began trying to muscle the Red Command out of key drug routes.
The
PCC has aggressively moved into new areas in the north and northeast of
Brazil, where the deadly prison riots have taken place in recent
weeks.
In response, the Red Command allied itself with local gangs, enlisting them to take on the PCC.
The killings began on New Year's Day, when
the powerful North Family gang, an ally of the Red Command, killed 56
inmates at a prison in Amazonas state, mostly PCC members.
The
North Family controls a lucrative cocaine route along the Solimoes, a
branch of the Amazon that flows from Colombia and Peru, the world's top
two cocaine-producing nations.
The PCC retaliated on January 6 by killing 33 inmates at the Monte Cristo prison in the neighboring state of Roraima.
Then at Alcacuz, PCC members slaughtered rivals belonging to the 'Crime Union of RN' - a gang carrying the state's initials.
PCC members attacked rivals with machetes and knives, beheading and quartering many of the 26 killed.
Following that, Brazilian police said they had interrogated five inmates they believe were responsible for the killings.
Of the 26 bodies previously sent to the medical examiner, 22 have so far been identified.
Experts
say the violence is part of a war between drug gangs battling for
control of one of the world's most important cocaine markets and
trafficking routes.
Brazil shares
borders with Colombia, Bolivia and Peru, the world's three biggest
cocaine producers. It is a key route for trafficking the drug to
Europe.
The series of riots and grisly
killings in Latin America's largest country has also put a spotlight on
overcrowding, lack of funding and inadequate levels of staff in the
prison system.
For instance, Alcacuz is home to more than 1,000 inmates, though it was built for 620.
Images
on TV and in newspapers of prisoners wielding weapons and cellphones
have embarrassed President Michel Temer and put pressure on his
administration to reform the system.
Source:Daily Mail
No comments:
Post a Comment