AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE
Banda Aceh, TAG – Indonesian prison
authorities has warned dozens of inmates who escaped during a massive under sea
quakes, including paedophiles and drug offenders, that they would be shot if
they resisted arrest.
Some
prisons in Aceh province, where 170,000 people were killed in a 2004 tsunami,
evacuated inmates Wednesday when an 8.6-magnitude earthquake jolted Sumatra
island and triggered an Indian Ocean-wide tsunami alert.
Twenty-nine
inmates from Sigli Prison, 112 kilometers from the provincial capital Banda
Aceh, made a getaway and were still on the loose Friday afternoon.
"We
are giving the prisoners a deadline of this evening to return. If we find them
and they try to flee, the guards and police are allowed to shoot," warden
Djoko Budi Setianto said.
"Most
of them are drug offenders. One was involved in a robbery case and some others
are involved in paedophilia," he said, adding that two prisoners had
called and promised to return.
Guards
at the prison, near the coast, evacuated all 221 inmates during the hours-long alert,
with memories of the 2004 destruction that destroyed the jail fresh in people's
minds.
"The
two guards who opened the gates to let the prisoners out on Wednesday were
caught in the 2004 tsunami, but they survived. They are still traumatised by
it," Setianto said, adding there was little damage to the prison from the
latest quake.
But
Banda Aceh Prison on the outskirts of the capital did not escape unscathed. One
of its walls crumbled when the quake hit, and inmates were out playing football
and volleyball on the prison field.
Prison
chief Ridwan Salam said the inmates panicked during the first jolt, which
rumbled for five minutes. They sat together in a field to pray.
"They
raised their hands in the air and continually chanted 'La Ilaha Illallah',"
Salam said. "Some were so emotional they started crying as they prayed."
The
prison originally sat just dozens meters (yards) from the coastline, but was
completely destroyed by the 2004 wave, which killed 350 of the 400 inmates
trapped in the building as it filled with water and collapsed. It has been
rebuilt around five kilometers (three miles) inland.
People
who had heard false reports that the prison had been destroyed came to search
for their loved ones Thursday.
"At least 150 family members came to the prison.
When they found their loved ones they were so relieved they hugged one another
and cried," he said.[]
Runaway Prisoners Warned After Quake Chaos
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
April 14, 2012
Rating:
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