Thirty-seven inmates were killed during an overnight raid by government security forces on a prison in Venezuela's southern jungle state of Amazonas, the governor said on Wednesday.
Human rights advocates have long complained that violent gangs exercise de facto control over many of the chaotic country's prisons and have ready access to automatic weapons and even hand grenades.
The government seeks to reassert control over understaffed prison facilities by sending in special forces from time to time, but deadly confrontations often ensue.
“There was a massacre,” tweeted Liborio Guarulla, the Amazonas governor, who said 37 prisoners had been killed.
“The morgue is totally overwhelmed,” he said later in an interview, adding that the raid on the prison in the state capital Puerto Ayacucho started around midnight.
Venezuela's Information Ministry, which processes media requests for the government, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
But a city council member, Jose Mejías, said gunshots were heard all night.
“The government went in to try to regain control of the jail. The prisoners resisted,” said Mejías in an interview.
Venezuela is one of the world's most violent countries and inmates often plan kidnappings and robberies from their cells.