Colombia’s healthcare show: ‘If you get seriously ill, you die’

While Colombia’s health minister was in the southeastern town of Leticia faking aid, locals were building the first repository for the town’s growing number of COVID-19 deaths.

The capital of the Amazonas province has always been spared much of the violence of Colombia’s armed conflict.

But the border town could not escape the full impact of the coronavirus pandemic that in two weeks killed more people than violence has in the past four years.

The fatal consequences of corruption and neglect

At least 27 people died of COVID-19 in the town of 50,000 since April 23 because chronic state neglect and the alleged corruption of Governor Jesus Galindo left Leticia without healthcare.

Health Minister Fernando Ruiz has gone to great lengths to conceal the fatal consequences of his inaction and the corruption allegations against Governor Jesus Galindo, President Ivan Duque’s ally.

Local journalist Antonio Paco Lasso has been unable to report on the reality in his town, because he became Colombian journalism’s first fatal victim of the pandemic on Thursday.


Coronavirus in Amazonas


The corruption that left Leticia at the mercy of a virus

Health Minister Fernando Ruiz visited the town on Sunday to “analyze Plan Amazonas, surrender protection equipment and talk to the authorities and population,” according to the Health Ministry.

The governor called for help last week, claiming that “up to this moment we do not have these resources here and we do not know how they should be managed” to combat the virus that has gone out of control.


Colombia’s southeast in crisis as coronavirus breaks out and promised medical aid is missing


Amazonas comptroller Daniel Oliveira told RCN Radio that Duque’s ally received $1.7 million (COP5 billion) to combat the coronavirus, but had gone on an embezzlement binge with the director of the local hospital, Jaime Riascos.

The hospital director was suspended last week after allegedly purchasing medicine that never arrived from ghost companies or was about to expire, and reporting bogus maintenance contracts.

The corruption and the robbery of hospital equipment left the hospitals in Leticia and Puerto Nariño in ruins and with a debt of more than $3.8 million (COP15 billion), according to Oliveira.


The ruins of the San Rafael hospital in Leticia

(Image: Luis Carlos Velez)

(Image: Amazonas comptroller’s office)

(Image: Luis Carlos Velez)

The ruins of Puerto Nariño’s hospital

(Image: Amazonas comptroller’s office)

(Image: Amazonas comptroller’s office)

How the minister is whitewashing carnage

The health minister used the abandoned hospital as the location for a propaganda video starring a whole team of people wearing personal protection equipment that almost 90% of Colombia’s hospital workers were never given, according to the Colombian Medical Federation.

According to weekly Semana, 26 health workers were flown in a week ago to replace the hospital’s staff that collectively resigned in protest last month.

Health Ministry

The minister and his propaganda

“If you get sick, you die and that’s the truth”

The local journalist may be dead, but local soccer player Luis Mosquera isn’t and he’s furious. The former Millonarios player told soccer magazine AS that the Health Minister had come to Leticia just for show.

“There is no aid here. If you get sick, you die and that’s the truth,” Mosquera said.

Soccer player Luis Mosquera

According to the former Millonarios player, the national government did not just fake sending medical aid, but also never sent economic aid that would allow the locals to stay at home.

Soccer player Luis Mosquera

Social distancing for the dead

Architect’s impression of Leticia’s first coronavirus victims’ repository.

While the health minister was doing his latest show, Leticia’s city hall announced that it had begun the construction of a building in which “52 tombs will be built for those who died from the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The repository comes with a special fence to prevent mourning friends and family members from being infected by their diseased loved ones, according to the architect’s design.

The National Health Institute estimated 400 ventilators would be needed in Leticia to save lives; Ruiz allegedly brought only three.

The minister also confirmed that “there is no intensive care unit” in Amazonas, which may soon also have no governor if the Supreme Court decides to throw Galindo in jail.

The town will have a fenced resting place for their loved ones, maybe more than one.

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