National Guard use assault rifles and teargas to combat gun battles at Rodeo I and II, inmates claim

This article is more than 9 years old

This article is more than 9 years old

Venezuelan troops have been accused of using teargas and "weapons of war" against rioting prisoners as they tried for a fourth day to dislodge a group of heavily armed inmates who have staved off attempts to retake control.

National Guard troops escorted 36 inmates from cellblocks inside the Rodeo II prison to areas that were no longer controlled by rebellious prisoners, the justice minister, Tareck El Aissami, told state television. At least 11 of the inmates were wounded, he said.

National Guard General Luis Motta Domínguez said the inmates evacuated "were hostages of the violent prisoners".

A 5,000-strong security force and inmates have engaged in gun battles at the Rodeo I prison and the adjacent lockup Rodeo II since the military launched a weapons search on Friday.

"The situation is the same," inmate Rafael Contreras said from inside Rodeo II. He spoke to the Associated Press after being reached by mobile phone by one of the inmates' relatives outside the prison.

"They are using weapons of war against us," Contreras said, referring to the assault rifles of the troops who have surrounded the prison.

Contreras said prisoners were also well-armed, but insisted they were acting in self-defence. "We use them to defend ourselves at times like this," he said.

El Aissami told Union Radio on Monday that only one prisoner and two National Guard troops had been killed during the clashes. At least 20 other troops have been wounded, he said.

Contreras said there had been 17 deaths amid the gunfire, and that several bodies were decomposing in the Rodeo II prison with the inmates.

Major Jorge Galindo, a justice ministry official, declined to comment on the claim, saying authorities would not provide additional details until the military takes control of the prison.

"They are lying," El Aissami said earlier of claims the death toll had risen.

A small group of inmates has prevented others from leaving the prison, he said.

Violence erupted in the El Rodeo I prison on 12 June when a riot broke out that left 22 people dead. Days later, thousands of troops stormed the prison to disarm the inmates.

Dominguez said leaders of the violent uprising inside Rodeo II are seeking to extend the conflict, calling fellow inmates inside other prisons and trying to convince them to attack National Guard troops.

Venezuela's severely crowded prisons have suffered repeated violent outbursts as rival gangs often fight for control of cellblocks and the sale of weapons and drugs.

The country's 30 prisons were built to hold 12,500 prisoners but instead hold about 49,000, according to the Venezuelan Prisons Observatory, a group that monitors prison conditions.

Last year, 476 people died and 967 were injured in the prison system, according to figures compiled by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.