A prison in drug trafficking land
President Bernardo Arévalo laid the first stone of a project that sounds like poetic justice. A new maximum security prison, valued at 130 million dollars, will be built precisely on a property that was seized from a renowned drug trafficker.
The El Triunfo Estate, in Izabal, belonged to Mario Ponce, sentenced to 25 years in the United States. Now, the Guatemalan Army will have one year to transform it into a center that will house 2,000 inmates considered highly dangerous.
An attempt to control the chaos
For the Arévalo government, prisons have been a constant headache. Riots, escapes and overwhelming violence culminated in the brutal murder of 11 police officers at the beginning of this year. That forced extreme measures such as states of siege and prevention.
The Minister of the Interior, Marco Villeda—who curiously was the judge who ordered the seizure of the property more than a decade ago—sees this as the beginning of a solution.
“Here we are going to begin to solve the historical problems that the prison system has had,” said Villeda, pointing out overpopulation and lack of control.
In a previous interview with The Associated Press, the same minister was clear: regaining control of the prisons is essential to curb the lethal power of the gangs from within.
The question that remains is whether higher walls and greater security will be enough to tame a crisis that has much deeper roots. Time, and the next 12 months of construction, will tell.




