04/05/2025
04/05/2025

LA PAZ, Bolivia, May 4, (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.