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Update5: Indonesian Police Storm Bali Prison to End Riot
February 22, 2012

An Indonesian policemen guards an injured prisoner outside Kerobokan prison in Denpasar, Bali, on Wednesday. Indonesian security forces stormed Bali’s Kerbokan prison near dawn An Indonesian policemen guards an injured prisoner outside Kerobokan prison in Denpasar, Bali, on Wednesday. Indonesian security forces stormed Bali’s Kerbokan prison near dawn
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bule4you
11:38pm Feb 22, 2012

Why didn't I ever have any fun and excitement like this in Rutan or Lapas Jogja?


Jeanne Hachette
4:14pm Feb 22, 2012

Hotel K,a great place to party, sex and drugs freely available for the convicts.


Jeanne Hachette
4:13pm Feb 22, 2012

Everybody in the government should read the book "Hotel K" ...and should be really ashamed


DrDez
3:29pm Feb 22, 2012

Peter... that would be never


PeterSmith
12:10pm Feb 22, 2012

The drug gangs are in charge of Kerobokan prison. This is what happens when the prison authorities, greedy for money, let the gang bosses become too powerful. The guards at Kerobokan lost control of the prison at least 12 months ago. All of this is just a repeat of what happen at Cipinang in 2007. When is Indonesia going to take the cleaning up of its prison system seriously?


Denpasar. Indonesian security forces Wednesday stormed a riot-hit prison housing murderers, pedophiles and Australian drug mules in Bali after a night of arson and rock-throwing.

Guards were forced to abandon the overcrowded Kerobokan prison, which holds 1,000 inmates including the 12 convicted Australians, during the night-long riot. Authorities said no foreigners were injured or involved in the trouble.

Some 100 heavily armed police and military stormed the jail on the holiday island at around dawn, firing volleys of rubber bullets. Officials said they intervened after attempts to negotiate with the rioting prisoners had failed.

“They were forced to open fire and three people were injured in the legs and taken to hospital,” Bali deputy police chief Ketut Untung Yoga Ana said. Another police official said later that an officer was also injured.

An AFP photographer saw four people with wounds to the arms and legs being taken out of the facility on stretchers and driven away in ambulances, watched over by armed and helmeted officers.

All 12 Australian prisoners at Kerobokan, including two on death row and six serving life sentences, were safe, Australia’s foreign ministry said.

“The wing where the Australians are held is far from the place where we had the trouble. The Australians were not involved in any way,” said Bali police spokesman Hariadi, who like many Indonesians goes by a single name.

Among the Australians at the jail are convicted drug trafficker Schapelle Corby and a group known as the “Bali Nine”, who were caught attempting to smuggle drugs from Bali.

Up to 1,000 armed security forces backed by armored vehicles and water cannon were stationed early Wednesday outside the jail, which is in a suburban area of Bali seven kilometres from the tourism hub of Kuta beach.

Police said they were still investigating the cause of the unrest, but local reports said the trouble began when one inmate stabbed another prisoner on Sunday, touching off reprisals that erupted into a full-blown riot.

Prisoners began trashing cells and throwing stones at the guards who were forced to abandon the jail -- built for just 300 inmates but now housing more than three times that many prisoners, both male and female.

“Late in the evening on Tuesday the prisoners got angry and set fire to one of the offices and began hurling stones at prison staff,” police spokesman Hariadi said.

Australian media reports said that some inmates had gained access to the registration wing of the prison, within meters of the entrance to the facility, where they set offices and furniture alight.

The Australian Associated Press said the inmates were in charge for almost seven hours and that prison governor Siswanto described the situation at the time as “out of control.”

It said that the registration wing, close to the maximum-security section where the two of the Bali Nine on death row are housed, had been destroyed.

Michael Chan, whose brother Andrew Chan is one of the Bali Nine, said he was worried about his brother given that during a previous riot “things got pretty bad, and they were in lockdown for a couple of days.”

Schapelle Corby’s family said she was well, with the women’s wing of the prison untouched by the violence.

“I am cautiously hopeful that things will be OK,” Schapelle’s sister Mercedes Corby, who lives in Bali, told Fairfax media.

There have been a number of riots at the jail in recent years, including one triggered by a police drug raid in June.

It is one of Indonesia’s most notorious prisons, with a combustible mix of inmates including convicted murderers, sex offenders and others guilty of violent crimes.

Agence France-Presse