Colombia’s Petro retracts claim children found after plane crash
Bogotá, Colombia - Colombian President Gustavo Petro on Thursday retracted his claim that four Indigenous children missing for more than two weeks after an airplane crash in the Amazon had been found alive.
Writing on Twitter, Petro said he had deleted his tweet from Wednesday night in which he had announced the rescue of the four children, including an 11month-old baby.
“I am sorry for what happened. The military forces and Indigenous communities will continue in their tireless search to give the country the news it is waiting for,” he said.
More than 100 soldiers have been deployed with sniffer dogs to search for the minors who were traveling in an airplane that crashed on May 1, leaving three adults including the pilot and the children’s mother dead.
Rescuers believe the children - who in addition to the 11month-old are aged 13, nine and four - have been wandering through the jungle in the southern Caqueta department since the crash.
“At this time there is no other priority other than progressing with the search until finding them,” added Petro. “The children’s lives are the most important thing.”
Petro’s stunning announcement on Wednesday had been met with uncertainty as he gave no details about where or how the children had been rescued, nor how they had survived alone in the jungle.
“Joy for the country,” he had declared. Amid widespread confusion, the military has not commented since Petro’s announcement on Wednesday.
The children’s grandfather, Fidencio Valencia said there was hope that they would be found
alive since ‘they are used to being in the jungle’.
He said they might be hiding out of fear but he told a local television newscast that ‘Indigenous energy’ would help the rescuers locate them.
Signs of survival
The government’s Institute of Family Welfare said that it had on Wednesday received ‘information from the territory confirming contact with the four children’.
It said the report indicated that ‘they had been found alive and are also in good health’.
The military forces and Indigenous communities will continue in their tireless search to give the country the news it is waiting for gustavo Petro
However, the agency acknowledged that the military had not been able to ‘establish official contact’ due to bad weather and difficult terrain, and were continuing search and rescue operations.
Avianline Charters, owner of the crashed aircraft, had previously said that one of its pilots in the search area was told the children had been found and that they were being taken by boat downriver. But the company also said that there was no confirmation that the children were out of danger, and thunderstorms posed a risk to them reaching safety.