Six inmates were killed in a prison riot in Italy and guards were taken hostage at another jail, as unrest spread in prisons across the country over measures to contain the coronavirus, including restrictions on visits.
TWO GUARDS WERE TAKEN HOSTAGE
Italy’s government has imposed a virtual lockdown across much of its wealthy northern regions at the epicenter of the contagion, in an effort to contain a virus which as of Sunday had killed 366 people.
In a TV interview the head of Italy’s prison administration Francesco Basentini said three inmates had died inside a jail in the northern town of Modena, and three others had died after being transferred away from the prison. “There have been a series of rebellions across the country,” Basentini said.
6 prisoners die in riot over anti-coronavirus measures WATCH
Video shown on Italian television showed police and fire trucks outside the prison as black smoke swirled into the sky.
The justice ministry said fires had been set at a number of prisons causing severe damage. Prison guards union Sappe said two guards had been taken hostage in the northern city of Pavia and were released after a police raid.
Justice ministry sources said two of the deaths in Modena were caused by an overdose from drugs found in the jail infirmaries, while a third prisoner was found blue in the face and the cause of the death was still unclear.