17 prisoners shot dead in PNG jail break

Police in PNG are attempting to recapture escapees after a mass jail break from a notorious prison in which 77 escaped and 17 were shot dead.

A perimeter fence at a jail

File image (AAP) Source: AAP

Prison officers in Papua New Guinea have reportedly shot and killed 17 inmates involved in a mass prison break, sparking calls for an investigation into overcrowded jails in the South Pacific nation.

Fifty escapees were still on the run from the Buimo prison in the city of Lae on Papua New Guinea's north coast, police said on their official Facebook page, warning the public that an increase in car jackings and armed robberies was likely.

"These are dangerous individuals," Lae Metropolitan Police Command said. "Police anticipate an increase in serious crimes in the city."

Local media reported than more than 70 prisoners attempted to escape from the Buimo prison, nearly 320 km north of the capital Port Moresby, on Friday.

The Post Courier and The National newspapers reported that 17 prisoners were shot dead, three captured, and 57 were still at large.

It was the third mass breakout from Buimo in three years.

International human rights groups have repeatedly called for an inquiry into PNG jails, citing concerns about overcrowding, limited access to medical treatment and delays in court proceedings.

"Unfortunately these incidents, tragic as they are, happen all too frequently in Papua New Guinea as there is poor accountability with police and security officers," Kate Schuetze, Amnesty International's Pacific Researcher, told Reuters by telephone.

In February last year, 11 prisoners were killed in an attempted breakout at Buimo after 30 prisoners attacked guards. Fifty-five men escaped from the prison in a breakout in 2015 and two years earlier one detainee was shot dead when 44 fled the same facility in another mass escape.

Australia's asylum-seeker detention centre on PNG's Manus Island has also been criticised by human right groups and the United Nations for cramped conditions, inadequate medical facilities and violence.


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Source: AAP


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