Gulf Today

Confusion over missing kids in plane crash

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BOGOTA: Four Indigenous children, including an 11-month-old baby, have been found alive in the dense Colombian Amazon ater a plane crash more than two weeks ago, President Gustavo Petro said on Wednesday, declaring “joy for the country.”

Petro said on Twiter the children were found ater “arduous search efforts” by the military, which has yet to confirm the rescue.

More than 100 soldiers had been deployed with sniffer dogs to search for the minors who were travelling in an plane that crashed on May 1, leaving three adults including the pilot and the children’s mother dead.

Rescuers had said they believed the children - who in addition to the 11-month-old include a 13, nine and four-year-old - were wandering through the jungle in the southern Caqueta department since the crash.

Petro did not provide any details on where the children had been rescued or how they survived alone in the jungle.

Avianline Charters, owner of the crashed aircrat, said that one of its pilots in the search area was told the children had been found and that they “were being transporte­d by boat downriver and that they were all alive.”

However, the company also said that “there has been no official confirmati­on” that the children were completely out of danger, and thundersto­rms in the area still posed a risk to them reaching safety.

The armed forces had earlier said their search efforts intensifie­d ater rescuers came across a “shelter built in an improvised way with sticks and branches,” leading them to believe there were survivors.

In photograph­s released by the military, scissors, shoes, and hair ties could be seen among branches on the jungle floor.

A baby’s drinking botle and half-eaten pieces of fruit had been spoted before the shelter’s discovery.

On Monday and Tuesday, soldiers found the bodies of the pilot and two adults who had been flying from a jungle location to San Jose del Guaviare, one of the main cities in Colombia’s Amazon rainforest.

One of the dead passengers, Ranoque Mucutuy, was the mother of the four children.

Giant trees that can grow up to 40 meters tall and heavy rainfall made the “Operation Hope” search difficult.

Three helicopter­s were used to help, one of which blasted out a recorded message from the children’s grandmothe­r in their native Huitoto language telling them to stop moving through the jungle. Authoritie­s have not indicated what caused the plane crash.

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