Dularika Perera, 38, only found out her cousin was among 26 people killed in the worst Sri Lankan prison riot in years when his photo was sent to her on WhatsApp.
Prison Riot Details
The seven prison officials and 19 prisoners died in two days of fighting between two groups of inmates at the prison in the coastal town of Negombo, about 35 km (20 miles) north of the commercial capital, Colombo, authorities said.
Sergeant S.D.S Abeywardana, 41, had spent a dozen years in Sri Lanka’s navy before joining a special unit under the prison’s department tasked with tackling corruption, drug trafficking and misconduct.
Abeywardana was among 120 members of the unit sent to the Negombo prison when clashes broke out on Sunday and escalated on Monday. Six of his colleagues also died after being attacked by inmates using mostly bricks and clubs when they attempted to stop prisoners from escaping.
The bodies of the 19 inmates who died were also released to their families.
Grief and Disbelief
“When I heard about the clash, I thought he’s only hospitalised, he will come home,” Perera said, holding back tears. “I never dreamt this would happen.”
“He has a five-year-old daughter and an eight-month-old son. He was more like a brother to me and we were very close. He looked after everyone in the family. He didn’t deserve to die like this.”
Initial investigations show the fight started when a few prisoners leaked information on efforts to smuggle drugs into the prison to prison officials, Minister of Justice and National Integration Harshana Nanayakkara told parliament on Tuesday.
The Negombo prison housed about 2,400 inmates despite only having a capacity for about 650, according to the Committee for Protecting Rights of Prisoners, resulting in severe overcrowding.
Original reporting: Appleton, WI News Feed (HLL/CB) — read the source article.