Escaped prisoners returned to overcrowded Indonesia jail

Tejo said the inmates told the police they decided to escape due to inhumane conditions in the prison


Afp May 06, 2017
An Indonesian soldier guards as a plainclothes policeman (C) detains a prisoner who escaped from the Sialang Bungkuk jail in Pekanbaru, on Indonesia's Sumatra island, May 5, 2017 PHOTO: REUTERS

INDONESIA: Indonesian security forces have rounded up most of the inmates who escaped during a mass breakout from an overcrowded prison on Sumatra island, police said Saturday.

A plainclothes policeman (L) detains a prisoner who escaped from the Sialang Bungkuk jail in Pekanbaru on Indonesia's Sumatra island, May 5, 2017 PHOTO: REUTERS A plainclothes policeman (L) detains a prisoner who escaped from the Sialang Bungkuk jail in Pekanbaru on Indonesia's Sumatra island, May 5, 2017 PHOTO: REUTERS

About 200 inmates broke out of the jail in Pekanbaru city, on Sumatra island, after they were let out of their cells to pray on Friday.
Almost 80 were quickly recaptured after the incident, and on Saturday the majority had been rounded up. "So far 171 inmates have been recaptured or surrendered willingly, we are still unable to determine the exact number of the inmates who escaped," local police spokesman Guntur Aryo Tejo told AFP.

Jail official sent to prison

Amateur footage broadcast on local TV stations showed scores of men, some wearing sarongs, scurrying through the gates of the Sialang Bungkuk prison on Friday, with no sign of officials in pursuit.
Most prisoners were recaptured while still near Pekanbaru. Dozens of the escaped inmates headed directly to another prison where they handed themselves in.

A plainclothes policeman (L) detains a prisoner who escaped from the Sialang Bungkuk jail in Pekanbaru on Indonesia's Sumatra island, May 5, 2017 PHOTO: REUTERS A plainclothes policeman (L) detains a prisoner who escaped from the Sialang Bungkuk jail in Pekanbaru on Indonesia's Sumatra island, May 5, 2017 PHOTO: REUTERS

Tejo said the inmates told the police they decided to escape due to inhumane conditions in the prison. The male-only prison has a capacity of 300 people but was holding 1,870 inmates, with only five guards and a porter on duty at any one time, said director general of prisons, I Wayan Dusak. "They also complained about unfair treatment by the prison guards," Tejo said.

More than a thousand inmates who did not escape the prison were refusing to return to their cells unless the head guard was replaced.
Jailbreaks are common in Indonesia, where inmates are held in often unsanitary conditions at overcrowded prisons. There was a spate of breakouts in 2013, including one where about 150 prisoners - including terror convicts - escaped from a jail on western Sumatra island.

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