My Favorites

 

Loading..

 

This area does not yet contain any content.
Hire Me!
Hire Me! Hire me for your writing assignment or event. I'm reasonable and reliable. Also looking for additional writing gigs. Email me at rclimpert003@yahoo.com

Based in Atlanta, GA - Rick Limpert is an award-winning writer, a best-selling author, and a featured sports travel writer.

Named the No. 1 Sports Technology writer in the U.S. on Oct 1, 2014.

Entries in Colombia (2)

Wednesday
Dec082010

A State of Emergency in Colombia

Conditions still bad in Colombia.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos on Tuesday declared a state of emergency for 30 days to cope with the worst downpours in decades.

"We've decided to declare an economic, social and environmental state of emergency in the disaster area for 30 days, and probably will be extended up to 90 days," said the president after a visit to the disaster area.

Santos expressed his sorrow over the 30 deaths caused by a landslide in Bello, Antioquia, in the country's northeast.

During his visit to the scene on Tuesday, Santos expressed his regret over the loss of lives among La Gabriela district residents. Authorities estimate that at least 100 people were buried by the massive landslide on Sunday.

The president urged the regional governors to evacuate the areas considered high-risk due to the intense rains that have hit the country.

"The priority of all our actions here and in the whole country is to save lives and lighten the suffering of the people, then we will think about how to repair the damages," he said.

Meanwhile, Disasters and Emergencies Coordinator of the Social Protection Ministry Luis Fernando Correa told media that "this event was considered a catastrophe of natural origin."

Correa also said that the affected families would each receive 10 million Colombian pesos (about 5,000 U.S. dollars), since the region was considered a disaster zone.

Moreover, Correa said that the injured will get a subsidy "to give them aid, for transportation, emergency medical service, hospitalization, medicines and rehabilitation."

Flooding and landslides triggered by heavy downpours this year have left 206 people dead and 1.5 million homeless in 28 of the 32 provinces in the South American country.

Tuesday
Dec072010

Landslides Bury Homes and People in Colombia

More than 100 people were feared dead following a landslide that buried a poor area during Colombia's heaviest rains in decades.

The rains that triggered Sunday's landslide in the Bello, a suburb of Medellin in Antioquia state, have also driven thousands from their homes, damaged coffee and flower crops and blocked the two-lane highways that are mountainous Colombia's commercial backbone.

Rescuers have so far recovered 23 bodies, including 11 children.

Authorities said nine of the children were playing in a park when the landslide struck.

Last year, 110 people died in rainfall-related calamities, while 48 were killed in 2008, Colombian Red Cross director of national relief operations Carlos Ivan Marquez said.

This year's rains - exacerbated by the La Nina weather phenomenon - are the heaviest in the 42 years since the country's weather service was created and started keeping records, agency director Ricardo Lozano said.

They prompted President Juan Manuel Santos to announce he was cancelling a planned trip to Cancun, Mexico, to take part in global climate talks.