Catholic leaders offer prayers, express outrage after 46 die in Honduras women’s prison massacre June 23, 2023By David Agren OSV News Filed Under: Feature, News, World News MEXICO CITY (OSV News) — Catholics in Honduras prayed for the victims of a horrific massacre in a women’s prison — an attack underscoring the power of the country’s criminal gangs and their control over correctional facilities. Many Catholic clergy expressed outrage, while demanding an overhaul of the country’s prison system. “Tragedy repeats itself,” tweeted Bishop Ángel Garachana of San Pedro Sula. “Who doesn’t shudder with pain for them and their families? Who doesn’t indignantly wonder when the radical and comprehensive transformation of a corrupt and failed prison system is going to be undertaken?” Security forces operate outside Centro Femenino de Adaptacion Social women’s prison following a deadly riot in Tamara, Honduras, June 20, 2023. The riot killed at least 41 women, most of them burned to death, in violence linked to gang activity, authorities said. (OSV News photo/Fredy Rodriguez, Reuters) Jesuit Father Ismael Moreno, director of a human rights center in the city of Progreso, tweeted, “Massacres are an epidemic in Honduran prisons. To combat and eradicate it, a new prison system is required with audacious public policy proposals and implemented by an interdisciplinary commission with the presence of international agencies.” The massacre occurred June 20 at the women’s prison in Támara, about 19 miles from the capital, Tegucigalpa, with authorities attributing the violence to an attack by the Barrio 18 gang. Authorities considered the attack premeditated. Gangsters pushed toward their rivals’ part of the prison, spraying their victims with bullets and hacking them with machetes. They locked some of the survivors in cells where they were doused with a flammable liquid and incinerated. At least 46 women were killed in the atrocity, though many of the bodies were too badly burned to be easily identified, according to press reports. President Xiomara Castro called the attack “monstrous” and “planned by maras (gangsters) in full view of security officials.” She promised she “will take drastic actions.” Castro subsequently replaced her security minister and tasked military police with taking control of the nation’s 21 prisons, according to The Associated Press. The Barrio 18 gang and rival Mara Salvatrucha, called MS-13, control neighborhoods, recruit teenagers by force and extort businesses large and small — forcing owners to flee if they can’t make the payments. Gang control often extends into Honduras’s prisons. Self-government on the inside and overcrowding were also to be blamed for the tragedy, according to a June 20 statement from the Archdiocese of Tegucigalpa’s prison ministry. The prison in Támara housed seven pregnant women and 22 inmates’ children in a separate section, according to the news outlet Contracorriente. “We join the pain of the relatives who are currently demanding answers to the many questions hanging over this sad event: the abuse of power, self-government within penitentiaries (and) doubts about how firearms … are brought in,” Oblate Father Agustín Lara Parrales, archdiocesan prison chaplain, said in the statement. “We demand that the authorities explain this cruel event that leads to an answer to what happened, and reinforce security that works effectively and promptly; respecting the rights of those deprived of liberty and ensuring human dignity,” the statement said. Read More World News Ahead of World Day of the Poor, cause opens for France’s ‘charitable spouses’ Trump’s cabinet picks; RFK Jr.’s pro-abortion record; abortion ballots examined Pope asks parishes, religious orders to help alleviate housing crisis Bishops decry move to add ‘right’ to abortion, same-sex marriage to Virginia constitution More than 2,400 anti-Christian hate crimes occurred in Europe in 2023, report finds World needs artisans, small businesses to promote common good, pope says Copyright © 2023 OSV News Print