COMAYAGUA, Honduras — Hector Daniel Martinez was asleep in a small
metal bed, one of dozens stacked so high in a narrow barrack that they
nearly touched the roof, when the flames started.
The fire raced above his head. The prisoners screamed.
"Rescue!" they cried. "Help!"
Martinez,
32 and a homicide suspect, ran toward the barrack's single entrance.
The door was locked. Most of the other 135 prisoners in the room ran
toward the other end, where there was a bathroom with water and sinks.
It turned out to be a fatal choice. Martinez survived. He was only one of 28 inside the barrack who did.
"One hundred and seven are dead," he said, his face conveying little emotion, as if a toll too difficult to believe.
In
all, the fire at an overcrowded prison in Honduras killed 358 people,
officials confirmed Wednesday, making it the world's deadliest prison
fire in a century. The local governor said an inmate called her moments
before the blaze and screamed that he was going to set the prison on
fire.
Comayagua Gov. Paola Castro said she called the Red Cross
and fire brigade immediately but firefighters said they were kept
outside for half an hour by guards who fired their guns in the air,
thinking they had a riot or a breakout on their hands.
As the
investigation continued into the night, a group of prisoners remained
guarded by officers inside the prison grounds. They described a chaotic
scene as the fire broke out and quickly spread from one barrack to
another, all filled with highly flammable curtains and mattresses.
When
the fire was extinguished all that remained of several barracks were
the brick exteriors, painted with murals of Jesus Christ, saints and
Psalms. Inside, the metal cots, stacked four high and at least a dozen
across, were charred and falling down.
At the end of each barrack
was a bathroom with sinks and tubs. Wednesday evening, there were still
numerous bodies inside several of the bathrooms.
In one large sink sat the bodies of two prisoners facing one another. Their remains were completely black.
Others were squished together, their bodies indistinguishable.
"In the other cells we found them in the same positions," said state prosecutor German Enamorado.
Selbim
Adonay, 18, also a homicide suspect, said he was trapped behind the
metal door leading inside his barrack, unable to do anything as the
flames spread and prisoners screamed.
"We couldn't do anything because we were locked inside," Adonay said.
Martinez
said dozens of the prisoners in his barrack rushed toward the bathroom
at the other end, desperately seeking to escape the heat. The sinks and
tubs were filled with water. Some may have tried climbing on top of one
another to reach the roof, Enamorado said.
From the front entrance
of the barrack, prisoners watched helplessly as the guard carrying the
keys fled without opening them up.
"He threw the keys on the floor in panic," Martinez said, a dust mask hanging from his neck.
A
prisoner who also served as a nurse picked them up and went from one
barrack to another, opening them up and barely withstanding the flames,
Martinez said.
But by that time, it was already too late.
By | Associated Press
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