Investigators say prison fire likely caused by cigarette

TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) – A devastating prison fire that killed 360 inmates in a Honduran penitentiary was likely caused by a candle or cigarette that set a mattress alight, investigators said yesterday.

Danelia Ferrera, a senior official in Honduras’ attorney general’s office, said an investigation involving Honduran and US agents found no signs that arsonists set the fire in the Comayagua prison north of the capital, Tegucigalpa.
One of the worst jail block fires in history spread through the prison on Feb. 14, burning prisoners alive or asphyxiating them as they were trapped in their cells.

“The local and international experts that have investigated this episode have concluded that the origin of the fire was an accident, that there was no gasoline, explosions or short circuits,” Ferrera said.

“It is suspected that somebody was smoking or had a candle that started the fire. There was no criminal hand.”
Honduras requested help from the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to assist with the probe.

The ATF supported the conclusions of Honduran authorities, saying that the cause of the tragic blaze was accidental.
“The cause of the fire is believed to have been an open flame – the source of which could include, but is not limited to, a cigarette, a lighter, matches, etc. – although the actual ignition source was not recovered,” the agency said in a statement.

The explanation given by Honduran and US officials was rejected by some grieving family members camped out near the morgue in Tegucigalpa waiting to identify the bodies of their loved ones.  Suyapa Tejeda, whose husband died in the prison, said she was not convinced that a cigarette or candle could have caused such a catastrophic blaze.

“This was premeditated and they are not going to convince me otherwise,” Tejeda said. “They were murdered and they should find those responsible.”

Family members have pointed to a number of suspicious circumstances around the fire.
In a video taken by a resident living close to the prison, gunshots could be heard rattling out while the fire blazed.
Police said they were firing warning shots in the air to stop inmates escaping. However, one prisoner told Reuters he saw police officers firing at prisoners.

The local fire chief also said police in charge of the prison did not let his crew enter the penitentiary for about 30 minutes to fight the blaze.

Honduras suffers from the highest murder rate per capita in the world and has more than 13,000 inmates in prisons designed for 8,000 people.