logo
'The alligators watched us all night': Survivors of Bolivian jungle plane crash rescued after 36-hour ordeal

'The alligators watched us all night': Survivors of Bolivian jungle plane crash rescued after 36-hour ordeal

Hindustan Times05-05-2025

LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — It was after their tiny plane crashed into the Bolivian jungle earlier this week that their ordeal really began.
After smashing into the ground, the aircraft flipped over into a lagoon infested with anacondas and alligators, plunging the pilot and four passengers — including a 6-year-old boy — into a harrowing 36 hours spent clinging to the plane's wreckage before being rescued Friday in the northeast of this Andean nation.
The doctor who treated the five survivors told The Associated Press on Saturday all were conscious and in stable condition, with only the young boy's 37-year-old aunt still hospitalized for an infected gash to her head. The rest were discharged and recovering from dehydration, minor chemical burns, infected cuts, bruises and insect bites all over their bodies.
'We couldn't believe it, that they weren't attacked and left for dead,' Dr. Luis Soruco, director of the hospital where the survivors were delivered in Bolivia's tropical Beni province, said by phone after sending the pilot and two of the women home with a strong course of antibiotics.
The pilot, 27-year-old Pablo Andrés Velarde, emerged Friday to tell the story that has transfixed many Bolivians — a rare piece of uplifting news for a nation badly in need of it after years of a spiraling economic and political crisis.
'The mosquitoes wouldn't let us sleep," Velarde told reporters from his hospital cot in the provincial capital of Trinidad, where Dr. Soruco said he was in surprisingly good health and spirits. 'The alligators and snakes watched us all night, but they didn't come close.'
Shocked that the caimans (pronounced KAY-men), a species of the alligator family native to Central and South America, didn't lunge at them, Velarde speculated it was the stench of jet fuel spilling from the wreckage that had kept the predatory reptiles at bay, although there's no scientific proof that's an effective alligator repellent.
Velarde said that the five of them survived by eating ground cassava flour that one of the women had brought as a snack. They had nothing to drink — the lagoon water was filled with gasoline.
The small plane had set off Wednesday from the Bolivian village of Baures, bound for the bigger town of Trinidad farther south, where Patricia Coria Guary had a medical check-up scheduled for her 6-year-old nephew at the pediatric hospital, Dr. Soruco said. Two other women, neighbors from Baures ages 32 and 54, joined them.
Such flights are a common form of transportation in this remote Amazonian region carved with rivers. Heavy rains wash away unpaved roads this time of year.
But just 27 minutes — almost halfway — into the flight, the plane's lone engine cut out. Velarde said he reported their imminent crash over a portable radio to a colleague.
He recalled in interviews with local media that he scanned the vast emerald green canopy below him and aimed for a clearing near a lagoon.
'There was no ranch or road along the route,' he said. 'It was just swamp.'
Instead of skidding across the shore as planned, the plane smashed into the ground and flipped upside down — injuring everyone on board and leaving Coria Guary with an especially deep cut to her forehead — before splashing into the water.
'The landing was very rough,' Velarde said.
As the plane flooded, the five of them managed to clamber on top of the fuselage, where they stayed for two terrifying nights surrounded by caimans and anacondas and attacked by swarms of mosquitoes and other insects.
They waved shirts and sheets to no avail and screamed each time they heard the thud of propellers or revving of a boat engine. On Friday, at the sound of approaching motorboats, 'we started shining our cell phone flashlights and shouting,' Velarde said.
A group of fishermen noticed, and helped them into their canoe. They called the authorities and delivered them to an army helicopter some hours later.
'We couldn't have handled it one more night," Velarde said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Andhra Pradesh health minister reports department's progress as NDA govt marks 1 year
Andhra Pradesh health minister reports department's progress as NDA govt marks 1 year

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Time of India

Andhra Pradesh health minister reports department's progress as NDA govt marks 1 year

Vijayawada: Marking the completion of one year of NDA governance in Andhra Pradesh, medical and health minister Satya Kumar Yadav presented a comprehensive progress report on the department's achievements under the coalition govt's rule. Addressing the media on Saturday, the minister emphasised that the NDA govt was committed to delivering on its promises and governing with integrity. "We are striving to provide better governance than what we promised, without betraying the people's trust. NDA is not just an alliance—it's in our DNA to act in line with the people's sentiments," he said. The health minister highlighted significant developments in the health sector over the past year, which he termed 'revolutionary.' A key milestone was the construction of 3,318 Ayushman health centres within just 12 months. He noted that the Centre had awarded AP a performance-based incentive of ₹100 crore, the highest in the country under this category. The State received a total of ₹1,065 crore under the CSR model, which supported infrastructure and service enhancements. A major diagnostic push led to 7.2 crore lab tests conducted across the state. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 5 Books Warren Buffett Wants You to Read In 2025 Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo "In the last five years, only 13 IPHL labs existed. In our one year, we've added 13 more," stated Satya Kumar. Doctors' attendance in govt hospitals also showed a significant rise, from 7.42% to 14.2%. This led to an eight percent increase in outpatient visits. Satya Kumar concluded by stating that the NDA govt remains committed to transparency, responsibility, and people-centric reforms in the healthcare sector.

US tourist dies after drinking hallucinogenic tea during ritual in Peru's Amazon forest
US tourist dies after drinking hallucinogenic tea during ritual in Peru's Amazon forest

Hindustan Times

timea day ago

  • Hindustan Times

US tourist dies after drinking hallucinogenic tea during ritual in Peru's Amazon forest

The 41-year-old man, Aaron Wayne Castranova from Alabama, died after drinking a trance-inducing brew during a 'spiritual tourism' trip in Peru's Loreto, a region on the border with Brazil, according to a report by the Daily Mail. The brew, known as ayahuasca, reportedly triggered a multi-organ failure. Ayahuasca, which can be fatal and cause irreversible damage, is a concoction traditionally used by Indigenous cultures in the Amazon for spiritual and healing rituals. Reports say the ceremony took place in a hostel in the Santa Maria de Ojeda community, which has become associated with 'spiritual tourism' in recent years. According to hostel staff, Castranova failed to inform the ceremony organisers that he was taking antibiotics at the time he consumed the hallucinogenic brew. Ayahuasca tourism has surged in recent years, with many retreats offering the Indigenous brew to visitors under the guidance of a shaman, with tourists often seeking it out as a remedy for depression. Interestingly, ayahuasca is the same drug Prince Harry admitted to taking to help him cope with the death of his mother, Princess Diana. However, the US Embassy in Peru has explicitly warned American tourists against consuming traditional hallucinogens like ayahuasca. 'These dangerous substances are often marketed to travellers in Peru as ceremonial or spiritual cleansers. However, Ayahuasca is a psychoactive substance containing dimethyltryptamine (DMT), a strong hallucinogen that is illegal in the United States and many other countries,' the US Embassy's website. Castranova's death comes a year after a British woman died at a Bolivian retreat known for its use of psychedelic substances. Maureen Rainford, a social worker, had booked a ten-day stay in October 2024 at the Ayahuasca and San Pedro Pisatahua Retreat. She collapsed during her stay and died about an hour later, despite CPR efforts.

Plane crashes near southern Mexico amid screwworm control efforts, 3 dead
Plane crashes near southern Mexico amid screwworm control efforts, 3 dead

Hindustan Times

time2 days ago

  • Hindustan Times

Plane crashes near southern Mexico amid screwworm control efforts, 3 dead

Two Guatemalan pilots and a Mexican agronomist engineer died Friday when their plane crashed in southern Mexico near the border with Guatemala as they freed sterile flies meant to stop the spread of screwworm in cattle. Mexico's Agriculture Ministry said in a statement that the Guatemalan plane crashed near Tapachula in southern Mexico, but did not give a cause. Mexico had stepped up efforts to control the spread of the pest last month under pressure from the United States government, which suspended cattle imports from Mexico because of fear of the screwworm. President Claudia Sheinbaum had said Friday that she didn't know when the suspension would be lifted, but that specialists from the US were in Mexico studying the country's efforts. The screwworm is a larva of the Cochliomyia hominivorax fly that can invade the tissues of any warm-blooded animal, including humans. The parasite enters animals' skin, causing severe damage and lesions that can be fatal. (AP) PY PY

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store