2015-02-12 09:01
Taipei - Six armed inmates who held a warden and guards hostage
in a failed bid to escape a prison in southern Taiwan committed suicide
early on Thursday and all the hostages are free, a top justice official
said.
The justice ministry said authorities had rejected the
inmates' demands for safe exit from the prison during the hours-long
standoff after the inmates seized weapons. By the pre-dawn hours, the
inmates had released all hostages except the warden. They then shot
themselves, and the warden was able to walk free, deputy justice
minister Chen Ming-tang said in a televised interview.
The
ministry did not offer any video or other evidence of the reported
suicides, but authorities were planning a news conference later on
Thursday.
Chen said in the interview that "there was no police
raid." He said four of the inmates shot themselves first and that the
remaining two had fired additional shots at them to make sure they were
dead before shooting themselves.
Five prison staffers were slightly injured during the standoff, Chen said.
The
incident started when the inmates — serving long sentences for
burglary, murder and drug crimes — took four rifles, six handguns and
more than 200 bullets from the prison's armoury, the ministry said.
The
ringleader, Cheng Li-te, belonged to the notorious mafia-type
organisation Bamboo Union and was serving a 28 ½-year sentence for
homicide, the ministry said. The other five inmates were serving
sentences ranging from 25 years to life.
They
demanded safe passage from the prison while holding Warden Chen
Shih-chih and head guard Wang Shih-tsang after the pair offered to swap
themselves for earlier hostages.
No injuries had been reported prior to the reported suicides in a standoff that lasted more than six hours, the ministry said.
Witnesses
interviewed by private cable news station TVBS said gunshots were
heard. Other reports said the shots were fired into the air.
Within
hours of the hostage taking, armed police had surrounded the prison in
the port city of Kaohsiung. Authorities also called on relatives of the
inmates to plea for the release of the hostages.
The ministry said
it had rejected demands that the police force be withdrawn and that two
vehicles be provided to allow the prisoners to leave in exchange for
the safety of the detainees.
The inmates used the need for medical
care as a pretense to lure prison guards before kidnapping them, the
official Central News Agency said.
The United Daily News said that
in a phone call with Cheng he said the incident had been long planned
and that he was prepared to die for it. The newspaper said Cheng
complained about the tendency of judges to presume guilt, insufficient
allowances for inmates and unfairness in granting medical paroles.
The
ministry said Deputy Warden Lai Chen-jung and head guard Wang
volunteered to swap with the two guards who were initially taken
hostage. Later, Chen, the prison warden, offered to exchange with Lai as
a hostage.
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