Friday, May 25, 2012

Columbia Conundrum for Travelers a tantalizing Thrill or terrifying taboo



 Is Colombia – a tantalizing   Thrill  for travellers or a  terrifying  taboo due to civil war? 



 In the eyes of much of the world, Colombia still blazons a scarlet letter. With Colombia’s 60 year-armed conflict, the histories of Pablo Escobar, drug cartels, and the murder and kidnapping records by FARC burning red hot in our memories, it challenges our imaginations to think of Colombia as a place peaceful enough to visit. But, it is: Colombia has been moving away from its violent past, at full speed, for much of the past 15 years. The homicide rate almost halved between 2002 and 2006.

While the government cracks down, people here take safety and security very seriously. They regard the petty crime and the violence that still characterize the country as shameful. Riding the metro and walking in the streets here, you will find any number of signs and advertisements cautioning against violence and gun use, in the name of the national movement to promote a more peaceful Colombia. Students wear peace patches and adults’ bags advertise anti-violent campaigns. Trucks are littered with  Colombianos por la Paz “Colombians for Peace” stickers. The amount of  Police, sniff-dogs,  security checks at building entrance  at Bogota  on day one   irrefutably proved  that security has become  a  matter of  paramount concern. Second day the  (May 1st)  the  peaceful  protesters  were  outnunbered by Police and   the bomb squads, 

I got mugged in Medelin  Colombia.   I was trying to get some more  pictures of the  scultptures of  Botero at relatively quiet public square .  it was our  last night in Medelin. I had spent  4  incident-free days in Colombia.   Medellín (the city made famous by it’s legendary women, Pablo Escobar…and Entourage) but   it was time to say adios for the end of our  sight-seeing for the day.

 

I saw movement from my peripheral vision that two Carribean looking   young man coming close to me  from nowhere. First I  thought that they want me to  take their pictures.   I had  somewhat advanced  ( Canon 7D with L  series lens)   DSLR.  The dudes were moving closer together. appear from nowhere, quickly pulling knives. They  pulled my camera. After  a little shuffle, I kicked the guy  and  got the camera back  but they  stabbed my hand with a  knife and  ran way with the camera bag.  I ran after them  with bleeding finger  but   they managed to run inside  a building across the  road.  I was lucky that the cut and the injury was  not too serious,

 

My camera always  draws attention. It has been  doing for  decades. I am almost always  warned to be  careful by the locals  no matter  where I travel.  It may be  Buenos Aires, Barcelona  or Bogota, Bombay  or even Boston. I am also reminded never to fight back. 

However  I fought back  on impulse. Fortunately they  helped me to  get  at least the   expensive camera back.  Next day hired a translator  and  filed the police report. The  Police   informed  me that they will not be able to investigate. I took the pictures of the robbers from the back and they were in the pictures in background.  That did not help,

I leaned  *Always trust your gut. Especially if your safety’s at risk. Your instincts know way better then you about everything – and they don’t care about looking stupid – so trust them.

All that matters is that we are safe. It’s a shame what happened, but we will always have our beautiful memories together. This  could  have happened anywhere else. 

I still felt  that many strange  people  I  met  in Colombia  were extra nice to us , specially we being just  tourist.,

 

It is an easy country to fall in love with, and many travelers do. It could well become your favorite country in South America.

 Here is the link to my pictures in Colombia .

http://picasaweb.google.com/TusharInAmericas






 

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