A riot in an overcrowded prison in northern Brazil has left at least 60 inmates dead, many of them decapitated, officials say.
![The riot led to the largest number of prison deaths in Brazil since the 1992 Carandiru massacre in Sao Paulo [Marcio Silva/AFP]](https://nehandaradio.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/brazil-prison-riot.jpg)
The violence ended 17 hours later, when the inmates surrendered their weapons and freed unharmed the last of 12 guards they had taken hostage.
Brazil has the world’s fourth largest prison population.
There are some 600,000 inmates in the country, and overcrowding is a serious problem. Reports said the capacity of the Anisio Jobim Penitentiary Centre, the biggest in Amazonas, was for 454 inmates, but it had 1,224 men.

When the riot began, six headless bodies were thrown over the perimeter fence of the prison. Pictures showed bloodied and burned bodies stacked in a concrete prison yard and piled in carts.
The state public security secretary, Sergio Fontes, said rival gangs operating inside and outside the prison had been fighting for control over drug trafficking.
The violence, he added, appeared to be a message from Family of the North (FDN), a powerful local gang, to rivals from the First Capital Command (PCC), one of Brazil’s largest gangs, whose base is in Sao Paulo, in the south-east.
Mr Fontes called it “the biggest massacre” ever committed at a prison in the state.
“During the negotiations [to end the riot], the prisoners had almost no demands. Their only request was not to be mistreated by the police when they came in,” he told local radio network Tiradentes.
“We think they had already done what they wanted: kill members of the rival organisation and get a guarantee that they would not be beaten by the police. The FDN massacred suspected members of the PCC and other rivals.”
![Relatives of inmates gathered at the main gate of the prison asking for information [Marcio Silva/AFP]](https://nehandaradio.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/brazil-prison-riot-2.jpg)
Prisoners at a second jail unit nearby also rioted and many escaped, Mr Fontes said. Some 40 inmates had been recaptured, he added. It was unclear how many remained at large.
Fights between rival gangs often result in dozens of inmates being killed and sometimes dismembered.
The gang members behind the deadly riots are often from violent inner-city areas of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo who have been transferred to prisons in remote states in order to break up their gangs.
However, the number of deadly riots in these states would seem to indicate that this strategy has not worked according to plan, correspondents say.
This was the deadliest prison riot in Brazil since 1992, when a rebellion at the Carandiru prison in Sao Paulo saw 111 inmates killed, nearly all of them by police as they retook the jail. BBC News
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