Relatives Want Custody of 4 Who Survived Plane Crash in Amazon
learningenglish.voanews.com - 1 year, 7 months ago - Read On Original Website
Four native children survived a plane crash and 40 days alone in the Amazon rainforest in Colombia. Now, a custody battle has started among their family members.
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How did the children survive for 40 days in the Amazon jungle?
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BY EATING CASSAVA FLOUR, FRUIT
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on their own
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miraculously
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a plane they were on crashed
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living off a bag of cassava flour from the wreckage
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to leave her and seek help
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a small plane crash
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by eating fruit, and using large leaves to shelter from the rain
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plane crash
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alone
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boarded the plane because they were fleeing for their lives
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used supplies from the wreckage to stay alive
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by eating farina
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eating cassava flour and seeds
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It's not known exactly how they were able to stay alive
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became their maze but also their protector
The children are siblings, or brothers and sisters. They range in age from 1 to 13. They remained hospitalized Monday and are expected to stay there for several more days. During that time, Colombia's child protection agency is speaking to family members to decide who should care for them after their mother died in the crash on May 1.
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Where are the children now?
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reunited with family
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hospitalized
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FOUND ALIVE
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in the hospital in Colombia
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in a military hospital in Bogota
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recovering in hospital in Bogota
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military hospital
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recovering at a hospital in Bogota
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Bogota
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in a forest clearing
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at a military hospital
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about two miles from the crash site
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Military Hospital in Bogota
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alone in the inhospitable jungle
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military hospital in Bogota
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in a hospital
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Colombia's Amazon jungle
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Amazon jungle
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at a hospital
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military hospital in Bogota, Colombia
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in a small opening in the jungle
Astrid Caceres is head of the Colombian Institute of Family Welfare. She said in a radio discussion that a caseworker was assigned to the children at the request of their mother's parents. The grandparents are competing for custody with the father of the two youngest children.
Caceres added that it was be possible that the children and their mother experienced abuse. "The most important thing at this moment is the children's health, which is not only physical but also emotional," she said.
On Sunday, grandfather Narciso Mucutuy accused Manuel Ranoque of beating his daughter, Magdalena Mucuty. Ranoque is the father of the two youngest children.
Mucutuy told reporters that the children would hide in the forest when Ranoque and his daughter fought.
Ranoque told reporters that there had been trouble at home. But he called it as a private family concern and not "gossip for the world."
When asked whether he had attacked his wife, Ranoque said: "Verbally, sometimes, yes. Physically, very little. We had more verbal fights."
Ranoque said he has not been permitted to see the two oldest children at the hospital. Caceres did not provide a comment on why Ranoque could not see them.
On May 1, the children were traveling by plane with their mother from the Amazonian village of Araracuara to the town of San Jose del Guaviare. The plane's engine failed. It fell off radar a short time later. A search then began for the three adults and four children who were on the plane.
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Who are the children and what led to the plane crash?
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Amazon
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to Flee Armed Group
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COLOMBIAN
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indigenous
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survived `40-day` ordeal in Colombian jungle
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Indigenous
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living alone for 40 days
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were traveling with their mother
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their mother and two other adults died
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their mother
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engine failure
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Mucutuy family
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age
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suffered an engine failure
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killed their mother
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Four indigenous
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threats from guerrilla members
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Huitoto Indigenous
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siblings, or brothers and sisters
For more than a month, the children survived by eating cassava flour and seeds as well as some fruits they found in the rainforest. The children are members of the Huitoto Indigenous group.
The siblings were finally found Friday, 40 days after the crash. They were flown to the capital, Bogota. Then they arrived at a military hospital, where they have received mental health services and other support.
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What kind of resources are needed to support the children and their families moving forward?
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food, water and help
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psychological services
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housing assistance
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books to read
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food
As they recover, the children have spoken with family members about their time in the jungle. The oldest, Lesly Jacobombaire Mucutuy, said their mother was alive for about four days after the crash before dying, Ranoque said.
The plane was found two weeks after the crash in a thick area of rainforest. The bodies of the three adults were recovered, but there was no sign of the children. That led people to hope that they were still alive.
Soldiers in helicopters dropped boxes of food into the jungle. Planes fired off flares at night to light up the ground for search teams. Rescuers also used speakers to send a message recorded by the children's grandmother telling them to stay in one place.
The children were finally found last Friday about five kilometers from the crash in a small opening in the jungle. General Pedro Sanchez led the search effort as chief of the military's Special Operations Command.
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How did rescuers locate the children?
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clues
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dog
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Columbian Amazon Forest
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from a plane
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in the hospital in Colombia
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near the border between Colombia's Caqueta and Guaviare provinces
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tracking scattered signs of their survival
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about 3 miles from the crash in a small clearing
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in the rainforest just 3 kilometers (less than 2 miles) from the crash site
Relatives and officials have praised Lesly for guiding her younger siblings through the 40 days in the jungle. The youngest child turned 1 while they were missing.
Dan Novak adapted this story for VOA Learning English based on reporting by The Associated Press.
custody -- n. the legal right to take care of a child
gossip -- n. information about the behavior and personal lives of other people
radar -- n. a device that sends out radio waves for finding out the position and speed of a moving object
indigenous -- adj. produced, living, or existing naturally in a particular region or environment