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Added on the 09/03/2021 15:55:25 - Copyright : Euronews EN
The Bogotá military hospital where the four children found after surviving 40 days in the Colombian Amazon are being held, as the doctor announces that they are in an "acceptable clinical state". IMAGES
The four Indigenous children who who had been missing for more than a month in the Colombian Amazon rainforest, arrive at the military hospital in Bogota. IMAGES
Four children, who survived a plane crash and were found alive after 40 days in the Colombian jungle, have been flown back to the capital Bogota. A Colombian army medical plane lands at a military airport at around 00:30 am (0530 GMT), and the children are immediately taken off the plane on stretchers with ambulances waiting to bring them to hospital. IMAGES
Dans les années 1970, Atlanta est en pleine expansion, notamment grâce à l'élection du premier maire noir de la ville. Cependant, sous la surface, des divisions raciales et économiques anciennes perdurent. Lorsque des enfants afro-américains commencent à disparaître, la population s'inquiète. La ville est en passe de traverser une crise sans précédent.
Caracas, Aug 6 (EFE).- (Camera: Jackdwin Sáez) "Where is that little kid?" Isabel Rinaldo wonders over and over again. She has not known the whereabouts of her youngest daughter for four years, since the Prosecutor's Office separated them, after she was accused by her husband of alleged sexual abuse of the girl, a crime that she denies and that she tried to prove was false unsuccessfully. Today, the little girl is considered a "missing person" by Interpol.FOOTAGE OF AND INTERVIEW WITH ISABEL RINALDO.
Jundiaí, Brazil, May 25 (EFE).- “I lost my dad, my mom and my grandpa in the course of two weeks.” A retelling of the same words can be heard all across Brazil. Thousands of children have been orphaned by Covid-19, victimized by an overlooked tragedy still unaddressed by public institutions.At least 45,000 children and teenagers have lost both parents to the pandemic, according to preliminary estimates by Brazil’s Institute for Applied Economic Research.FOOTAGE OF CHILDREN WHO HAVE LOST THEIR PARENTS.SOUNDBITES OF ADRIANA DEL RÍO, RENATA PASCHOALINI, RYAN LUCATTO AND GLAUCE GALÚCIO.TRANSLATIONS:Adriana del Rio:"It is a pain that will never leave. A pain that only God will teach me to live with as time goes by""(The initiative) is like a father who embraces his son in a moment of pain""I couldn't just mourn, be on my own and cry because of the pain of losing my family. I had to just smile the next day and tell my granddaughters that everything is fine, that granny is here"Renata Paschoalini:"The initiative 'Mothers who welcome' arose from the need to help two young siblings, one who was 20 years old and the other 10, who lost their parents and grandfather in just 15 days due to Covid""Only this last week 5 mothers died and we got 19 minors whose five mothers died."Ryan Lucatto:"The first question my brother asked me was, did Mmm and Dad suffer? I told him that from what I know, I understand, they didn't, because they were both intubated when they died. And there he asked me, will we ever find them in heaven? Yes, I told him. Those are the only two questions he asked me and still asks me."