Missing children found after more than a month in Amazon - four kids aged 13 to 11 months survived a plane crash and 40 days in the Colombian jungle.

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Now for some good news.



Four young children have been found alive after more than a month wandering the Amazon jungle, according to Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro.

“A joy for the whole country! The four children who were lost 40 days ago in the Colombian jungle were found alive,” Petro tweeted on Friday, attaching a image that seems to show search crews treating the children in a forest clearing.

The children, who appear gaunt in the photos, are being evaluated by doctors and will be evacuated for medical treatment.

Lesly Jacobombaire Mucutuy, age 13, Soleiny Jacobombaire Mucutuy, 9, Tien Ranoque Mucutuy, 4, and infant Cristin Ranoque Mucutuy were stranded in the jungle on May 1, the only survivors of a deadly plane crash.

Their mother, Magdalena Mucutuy Valencia, was killed in the crash along with two other adult passengers: pilot Hernando Murcia Morales and Yarupari indigenous leader Herman Mendoza Hernández.

The children’s subsequent disappearance into the deep forest galvanized a massive military-led search operation involving over a hundred Colombian special forces troops and over 70 indigenous scouts combing the area.

For weeks, the search turned up only tantalizing clues, including footprints, a dirty diaper and a bottle. Family members said the oldest child had some experience in the forest, but hopes waned as the weeks went on.

Indigenous leader Lucho Acosta, the coordinator of indigenous scouts, credited the “extra effort” of search and rescue teams and local authorities to find the children in a statement on Friday.

“They all added a little effort so that this Operation Hope could be successful, and we can hope the kids will emerge alive and stronger than before. We have been hoping together with the strength of our ancestors, and our strength prevailed,” he said.

“We never stopped looking for them until the miracle came,” the Colombian Defense Ministry tweeted.

During a press conference Friday evening, Petro said the children would receive immediate medical evaluation and treatment, and that he hoped to speak with them on Saturday.

“The most important thing now is what the doctors say, they have been lost for 40 days, their health condition must have been stressed. We need to check their mental state too,” he said.

“They will receive medical treatment and depending on what the doctors say they might be transferred to Bogota or Villavicencio. I’m going to try speak with them tomorrow,” he said.

Petro, who was previously forced to backtrack after mistakenly tweeting that they had been found last month, described the children’s 40-day saga as “a remarkable testament of survival.”

“These are the children of peace and the children of Colombia,” he said.
 
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Wasn't this Lara Croft's origin story once upon a time? We Kiwis should keep an eye out for any mysteriously raided tombs in a decade or so.
 
You could watch Lord of the Flies, though it's not really accurate to how people work together in survival situations. The author was a dumbass who said it wouldn't have gone that way if all the kids were girls.
Funnily enough, there was a real-life incident reminiscent of Lord of the Flies:

A real life Lord of the Flies: The 50-year-old story of a group of teens stranded on an island​

It's a tale of a group of schoolboys stranded on a remote and deserted island for more than 15 months. It might remind you of the famous novel—Lord of the Flies, by William Golding—but as you'll see, the outcome of this real-life story could not have been more different.

The story begins in 1965. Mano Totau and five of his friends were studying at a boarding school in Tonga, an island nation in the Pacific Ocean. Bored, rebellious, and yearning for adventure—they stole a traditional whaling boat—and with reckless abandon they set off for Fiji.
CBS News
Of course, in real life the kids stuck together to survive. That's the thing that a lot of authors don't get-they always want to make a "Humans are the real monsters!" statement, but people would never have been civilized unless they wanted to be.
 
Of course, in real life the kids stuck together to survive. That's the thing that a lot of authors don't get-they always want to make a "Humans are the real monsters!" statement, but people would never have been civilized unless they wanted to be.
you can only have the modern back-biting society envisioned in LotF (and playing out on reddit and twitter and social media) when you have massive oversupply of necessities and shit; when everything is hardscrabble everyone pulls together (and the very few sociopaths get removed from the equation quickly).
 
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