Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta lost. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta lost. Mostrar todas las entradas

After several days of searching, relief agencies managed to locate a young couple who had been reported missing in the snowy Tolimawhen on a long journey they tried to reach the municipality of Salento, Quindío.

They entered that mountainous area through the village of Juntas, in Ibagué, but on the way things got complicated due to persistent rains and low temperatures that made the journey difficult.

Fortunately, we managed to communicate with the young people who had been missing for 8 days in the Nevado del Tolima“, affirmed César Gutiérrez, secretary of Environment and Risk Management in Ibagué

They are Natalia Rojas and Andrés Quimbayo Casas, both 27 years old, who on February 24 began a journey in Ibagué to try to reach the municipality of Salento, Quindío.

Lost in the Nevado del Tolima

Natalia Rojas and Andrés Quimbayo Casas, both 27 years old, began a journey in Ibagué on February 24 to try to reach the municipality of Salento, Quindío.

“My daughter is fine and I thank God and the rescue team of the Ibagué Mayor’s Office who found her safe and sound

On Monday, February 28, their relatives informed the authorities that they had lost all cell phone communication with them, so they asked for help looking for them.

Residents of the area and even students joined the search efforts of the relief agencies, and it is believed that this Wednesday they will return to Ibagué, where they are awaited by their parents and relatives.

Marta Flores, mother of Natalia Rojas, said: “My daughter is fine and I thank God and the rescue team from the Ibagué Mayor’s Office who found her safe and sound.”

The Secretary of Environment and Risk Management in Ibagué pointed out that traveling or climbing that peak at more than 5,000 meters high, between Tolima and Quindío, becomes complicated by the constant rains and low temperatures of these months.

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In Ciénaga (Magdalena) there is annoyance and disagreement with the mayor Luis Tete-Samperby tourism service providers, after it became known that the municipality had lost the Sustainable Tourism Quality Certification.

(Also read: Commerce and schools closed in El Banco, Magdalena, for fear of Eln)

This recognition, granted by Icontec and endorsed by the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Tourism and Fontur, had been acquired in 2017.

For Cienagueros, this accreditation was transcendental to continue promoting this municipalityincluded within the Network of Heritage Peoples of Colombia in 2012.

The alleged interest in positioning Ciénaga as a tourist destination is nothing more than a populist proposal

The tourist promoters of Ciénaga consider that the destination has a series of architectural, historical, cultural and natural attractions that allow it to be positioned at a national level.

However, they point out that the administrations on duty they have not given relevance to this matter and, contrary to generating programs, projects and spaces that encourage the arrival of tourists, it has gone backwards in all aspects.

The greatest evidence of this disinterest is having lost the Sustainable Tourism Quality Certification for which they had worked long ago, according to Agustín Lara Algarín, director of the Ciénaga Tourist Information Point.

“The supposed interest in positioning Ciénaga as a tourist destination is nothing more than a populist proposal from each politician at election time. Once they get to the position, they disregard and do not care about working for sustainable tourism”, said the tourism representative.

Another argument used by the Ciénaga tourism sector is the permanent absence of a municipal delegation in Anato tourist showcaseorganized by the National Network of Heritage Towns of Colombia, which takes place annually at the Corferias exhibition center in Bogotá.

“Not being present in such an important scenario prevents the tourist benefits that Ciénaga has from being made visible on the world scene,” added Lara Algarín.

Mayor was unaware of the loss of certification

We do not send the required reports to Icontec on progress in tourism in the municipality

After learning that Ciénaga lost this quality certification, Mayor Samper delivered a statement.

“I cannot be aware of everything,” said the president, who did not hide his upset by the news and promised to establish responsibilities and resolve what happened.

“They did not notify us until this week, but the important thing is that we are going to work,” added the mayor.

On the reasons for losing the accreditation, he accepted that “we do not send the rigorous reports to Icontec on the progress in terms of tourism in the municipality.”

Likewise, he regretted that officials of his administration are not fulfilling their duty, before which he announced changes to your team of work.

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“It is not fair that we are going through this,” added the president, who promised the Cienagueros to recover the certification and take steps to promote tourism in the municipality.

Although he does not see it as relevant, he announced that Ciénaga will be present next year with a stand in Anato’s tourist window.

Roger Urieles
For THE WEATHER Santa Marta
@rogeruv

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The mobility It has become one of the main issues that affect the quality of life of Colombians.

And it is not for less, because according to international statistics, several cities in our country are among the most congested in the world and three of them appear in the first places where the most hours were lost in traffic jams during 2021.

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This is why local administrations have decreed measures such as the pico y placa, which is becoming more severe, as in Bogota and Medellín, where the restriction is practically all day.

But this has not been enough to prevent us from spending hours detained on the streets of our cities with no chance of moving forward.

Last year, each driver in the country’s capital lost 94 hours in traffic jams, while in the capitals of Antioch and Valle del Cauca were 53 and 51 hours, respectively. This, according to data from the company Inrix, which analyzes mobility in the world.

(Also read: The ABC of the payment to circulate during peak and plate in Medellín)

In other words, the time lost in the capital, for example, is the same as that spent watching 62 soccer games without counting the added time. It is even almost the same as seeing a World Cup, because in this contest 64 commitments are played.
Bogotá is ranked 12th worldwide -it is the first in Latin America-, Medellin in 94 and Cali at 109. The list is led by London (United Kingdom), Paris (France) and Brussels (Belgium), with 148, 140 and 134 hours lost in 2021, respectively.

traffic jams Bogota

This is what the traffic jams look like on the streets of Bogotá.

Photo:

Maurice Moreno. TIME

And not only those who drive a private vehicle lose hours in traffic jams, but also those who travel by bus and van.

According Ricardo Montezuma, an expert in mobility, this situation occurs in our country, basically, due to three aspects: “We have not been able to order the cities. We have not been able to generate the accessibility infrastructure. I would say that there is another structural factor and it is the disastrous way in which we drive, such precarious forms of driving linked to violence and road insecurity. We have very disorderly ways of driving.”

For example, explains the expert, Bogotá is a structurally blocked city, it is a city that has very few entrances and exits. However, this is repeated in most capital cities of the country.

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Precisely, for the expert, these three aspects are the ones that should be focused on in order to solve mobility problems, which are one of the main concerns of citizens.

As for the pico y placa that were implemented in Bogotá and Medellín, for Montezuma these do help mobility, but they can have “dire” effects in terms of the purchase of motorcycles and other “older, obsolete and polluting” cars. , asserted the expert and added that “it helps, but the change is not structural.”

In that it agrees Dario Hidalgo, who is also an expert in mobility: “Vehicle restrictions are measures that solve issues in the short term, but they do not generate structural solutions. In fact, many people who have the possibility pay to drive or buy another vehicle”.

We have such precarious forms of driving linked to violence and road insecurity. We have very disorderly ways of driving

In addition, there is controversy because in these two capitals you can pay to be exempt from the restriction.

Are there many cars and few roads in the cities of Colombia?

Another debate that has been raised to improve mobility in the country, beyond restrictions such as the peak and license plate, is that we have many cars and few roads. There are those who say that there is nowhere to go.

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According to the Single National Transit Registry (runt), as of December 2021 there were 17,020,451 vehicles in Colombia, of which 10,136,593 are motorcycles and 6,701,970 are cars, vans, trucks, buses, vans and dump trucks. The remaining percentage corresponds to machinery, trailers and semi-trailers, which are 181,888.

In 2019, the total registrations in Colombia were 15,337,965 and in 2020 they were 16,043,484. Practically one million new means of transport are registered each year in the country.

The number of vehicles has grown by more than 50 percent over the last 10 years, since in 2011 there was a record of 7,220,219 in the country. And currently the majority are in Bogotá, with 2,626,905.

“We have a high level of road congestion that is reflected in lost hours. That is driven by a rapid increase in vehicle ownership,” Hidalgo said.

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For him, the vehicle fleet has grown considerably over the last 10 years, but there have been no major improvements in infrastructure for vehicle circulation. However, he also believes that building more roads is not the solution to the problem, as this could even generate more traffic, since many would be motivated to purchase a vehicle.

In Cali there are 454,389 private vehicles registered with the city's Ministry of Mobility.

He argues that “attractive” solutions for citizens should be proposed. “On the one hand, we must improve access to cities. Although we need very attractive alternatives. That public transport improves, but also the opportunity to go on foot and by bicycle”.

Even the debate of regulating the vehicle fleet has been planted, despite the fact that some experts point out that this is not the real problem. “We have a lot of old obsolete cars. We do not have many cars if we compare ourselves with other countries, although there will be a lot, it will continue to grow, it will not stop. We do have a lot of motorcycles, motorcycles are a more serious problem for me than even cars. The motorcycles seem to have no regulation, “said Montezuma.

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From the Mayor’s Office of Medellín they point out that the Territorial Ordering Plan (POT) is focused on improving and strengthening non-motorized modes and public transport in the first order. Proof of this is that the tender for the third line of the Metro has already been opened.

“It should be noted that the city has a vehicle fleet of approximately 1,788,000 vehicles, where the road network, due to the densification of the city itself and due to topographical conditions, does not grow at the same rate as the vehicles, a situation that generates a phenomenon of important congestion”, commented Víctor Hugo Piedrahíta Robledo, Undersecretary of Mobility of Medellín.

traffic jams Bogota

Bogotá mobility through 26th street, from downtown to the west of the capital.

Photo:

Maurice Moreno. TIME

And he added that another problem is that culturally there is a perception that the private vehicle represents the best way to get around and “that is why the invitation from the Municipality is to discourage the use of the private vehicle and bet on sustainability.”

There is also concern about the delay in each journey

On average, a private car trip in our country lasts 45.57 minutes, according to information from the Numbeo platform.

This figure is made taking as a reference each journey reported to this platform. While there are trips that can last 10 minutes, others can last more than an hour. In other words, there may be people who take up to 45 minutes to go to work and another 45 to return home.

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This indicator in Bogotá is above the national average, as it reaches 52.13 minutes. This makes it the Latin American city with the worst weather -followed by Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and Mexico City (Mexico).

We have a high level of road congestion that is reflected in lost hours. That’s fueled by a rapid increase in vehicle ownership.

As for the other cities in the country, the travel time is considerably reduced when compared to Bogotá. However, experts explain that this is due to the size of the territory. On average, a trip by car in Medellin lasts 36 minutes, while in Cali and Barranquilla it takes 35 and 27.67 minutes, respectively.

In addition, it is necessary to see who are spending the most time on the journeys. Experts say that the lower class is the most affected.

Numbeo also collects information from some intermediate cities, such as Manizales, where each tour lasts 12 minutes.

This is what drivers think about mobility in Bogotá, Medellín and Cali

Drivers in these cities agree that getting around by car is becoming increasingly complex and point out that if public transport were more accessible, they could get out of the car more often.

Alejandro Álvarez, who travels frequently between the north and south of Medellín and its metropolitan area, says that entering the southern municipalities, such as Envigado, is increasingly complex, both through main and alternate roads, regardless of the time. This can often take up to an hour, but it is also a journey that could be done in 25 minutes if the traffic is flowing, but this is rare.
From Cali, Kevin López says that one of the problems of mobility is that there is no respect on the roads, something that worsened after the national strike.

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Medellin Mobility

Overview of mobility on Oriental Avenue, in Medellín.

Photo:

Javier Grandson. TIME

“People no longer respect the roads, they get into the wrong way, they pass the traffic lights.” These situations, he explains, can end in accidents that ultimately cause traffic jams.
Antonio, who works as a driver for a private company in Bogotá, says that with the pick and tag all day he has improved mobility in the city.

However, he finds the number of hours lost in traffic jams worrying.
“It’s a long time and most of it causes stress,” he explained. For him, you can’t walk on roads like the NQS, so he prefers to always travel along the 68. But he is emphatic when saying that “we lack a lot of civic culture when it comes to driving.”

Other drivers from Bogotá point out that with the works that are being carried out in the capital, the trips are increasing. And they add that when the Metro works begin, it will be worse. They narrate for a route between the north and the Center you have to leave an hour in advance to arrive on time, but they fear that the weather will get worse.

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Faced with this problem, experts indicate that the authorities must invest more in infrastructure, better conditions must be guaranteed in public transport, so that getting out of the car is not so annoying for those who are used to traveling in their own vehicle. But citizens must also contribute to the solution by having a better road culture.

MATTHEW GARCIA
Nation’s Editor
On Twitter: @teomagar
matgar@eltiempo.com

It was a trip of a little more than two hours, by sea, which separated the brothers from the Bahamas. Juan Esteban and Maria Camila Montoya Caicedo of the dream of meeting his mother, who lives in Houston, in U.S.

They were among the more than 40 travelers, without life jackets, who hoped to reach the North American country, but that journey turned their lives upside down.

They thought that the journey would not take more than an hour and a half from Bimini, in the Bahamas, according to what they had been told by some inhabitants of the islands where they arrived for a walk, but the fishing boat in which they were going with 38 other travelers was trapped between gigantic waves and a storm.

But those who know these trips and navigate know that covering a journey of these lasts much longer, since from Bimini, an island chain in the Bahamas, there are about 88 kilometers (55 miles) east of Miami.

This whole nightmare started last week, when the brothers born in Guacaríinseparable since childhood, decided to go on a trip from this town in the center of the Valley del Cauca that does not exceed 50,000 inhabitants. They went to the Bahamas to rest. That’s what they told some relatives and their relatives.

(Also read: The Buga massacre: questions and the investigation, one year later)

However, being in these Caribbean islands, they wanted to embark on Saturday to reach the lands of Uncle Sam, risking possible inclement weather and the sea, and being detained on the mainland because they would not be documented.

We need each other to support each other, to be able to overcome the loss of our little girl; I ask you to please not deport him

Apparently, they had assumed that the trip was going to be easy and so they let some friends know. That is why they decided to extend what was a walk to visit Marcia Giraldo, their mother, whom they had not seen since they were little. But family members, such as Hugo Viveros and grandfather Danilo Caicedo, affirm from Guacarí that they do not know how both brothers ended up on the shipwrecked fishing boat or how the contact with their crew had been to take them.

However, when the ship was about 20 nautical miles from the US coast, the sea began to get rough. Juan Esteban, 22, and his sister, 18, began to be frightened by waves that exceeded three meters in height. As the sea roared, winds of 10 to 20 knots rocked the ship from side to side.

The passengers and these Valle del Caucanos panicked because of the storm that engulfed them. Many of them did not have life jackets.

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Panic seized all the occupants of the ship. Juan Esteban was fighting with his strength to cling to his sister, his best friend and his ally since childhood.

But due to those raging waves and the winds that raged against the ship, the brothers could not continue together. The desperation and screaming increased until they were out of sight of each other and then the speeder capsized. The screams and anguish increased from those who were already in the water. Juan Esteban wanted to continue clinging to something firm and that is why he sought to climb onto the capsized ship.

Hours later, everything was loneliness and despair for the Valle del Cauca until four days had passed. During that period, he was glued to the part of what would have been the bow that remained afloat and continued to sink, from that Saturday of the tragedy until he was found on Tuesday by a commercial ship that notified the US authorities. The ship sank in the middle of the journey, between Miami Y Cape Canaveral.

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This Colombian felt that he had no more strength, that he would drown or disappear like his younger sister and the other castaways; that he would never see his mother again, for whom he had fought to reach the United States, nor his family who remained worried in Guacarí. During the day, the sun bent him down in those lonely hours and also the cold that worsened at night.

Juan Esteban told all this to his mother, Marcia Giraldo, with whom he was able to communicate from the hospital in the United States where he was sent to tell him that his soul sister had disappeared. Meanwhile, the authorities of that country continue to review his immigration status.

He really likes the social part, here in Guacarí he has many friends, they are very good people. Please, let’s all help my daddy. he is a good young man

The mother continues to raise the clamor to the media in the United States. She asks that her son be able to stay with her so that the journey of Juan Esteban and her daughter who disappeared is not in vain. “We need each other to support each other, to be able to overcome the loss of our little girl; I ask you to please not deport him,” the mother pleaded through the Telemundo network.

In this area where the shipwreck occurred, the defense force reported that last Friday they rescued 31 migrants who were in another overloaded boat that was also shipwrecked. Those too had sailed from Bimini.


Attached to his sister and a lover of agriculture

Juan Esteban and María Camila adored each other to the point that they studied at the same university: the Minuto de Dios University Corporation (Uniminuto), in Buga, less than half an hour from Guacarí.

María Camila had begun studies in International Trade, and Juan Esteban, in Business Administration. But this young man, a lover of exercise, riding a bike and going to the gym like his sister, had previously studied technology in Agricultural Sciences. He helped his grandfather with tasks related to this field and also works in a sugar mill, also in Valle del Cauca.

“Juan Esteban and María Camila are my beloved grandchildren. Juan Esteban has always been very enterprising and intelligent. He is a farmer like me. We plant corn,” says grandfather Danilo. “He really likes the social part, here in Guacarí he has many friends, he is very good people. Please, let’s all help my daddy. He is a good young man.”

“It was very common for the whole family to share almost daily in front of the Guacarí stadium. Almost everyone came, including Juan Esteban and María Camila, with whom we would talk, recollect and tell many stories,” recalls Hugo Viveros, whose daughter is a cousin of the Montoya Caicedo.

Both young people lived with their grandparents, because the father of these brothers is in Buga and his mother, in the United States, looking for a better future.

“He was quite close with his little sister and both were attached to their mother, despite being very far away,” says Viveros, who is one of the administrators of a variety and entertainment portal in Guacarí. He assures that the information about this tragedy is very scattered and unclear. He maintains that the only thing the family is certain of is that Juan Esteban is deprived of liberty and there would already be a lawyer. That’s why they ask to be released.

“I understand that they were in a tour and for a walk over there (United States), but they say that they were kidnapped and ended up on that boat that was shipwrecked, but for sure, nobody knows anything, only many versions are heard. The only thing I know is that he (Juan Esteban) is the only survivor and only four bodies have been found. That is why we have faith that María Camila will be found alive”, says Viveros.

“We only ask from Guacarí for this cry to be heard in the United States that they have humanity, because Juan Esteban is receiving inhuman treatment and he does not deserve that, because he is a hard-working and very healthy boy,” they say in this family known in Guacarí as one of the greatest and most beloved. That is why the news of the tragedy spread quickly in this small town, dressed in mourning and where candles continue to be lit so that Juan Esteban does not continue to be detained and returns to his family.

CAROLINA BOHÓRQUEZ AND JOSE ANTONIO MINOTA
TIME CORRESPONDENTS
CALI

Hidden deep in an East African rainforest lies a mystery: the ruins of the lost city of Gede, an intriguing archaeological wonder known as the “Machu Picchu” of Kenya.

This Swahili city has baffled archaeologists and historians for decades due to the lack of references to the site in historical sources, but its remains prove that it was home to an advanced civilization before it was abandoned in the 17th century.

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