Visitando la ciudad con menos oxígeno del mundo (peligrosa en todo sentido) ⚠️🇵🇪

Luisito Comunica
14 May 202418:11

Summary

TLDRLa Rinconada, la ciudad más alta del mundo, es retratada en este script como un lugar peligroso y desafiante. Con un ambiente de crimen omnipresente, tráfico humano y condiciones de trabajo extremas en los minas, la vida es dura y la falta de oxígeno es palpable. Los mineros enfrentan duras jornadas laborales y la esperanza de encontrar oro, mientras que la ciudad se enfrenta a problemas de salud y descuido ambiental. Un viaje que ofrece un vistazo a la realidad cruda y la lucha diaria de sus habitantes.

Takeaways

  • 🏙️ La Rinconada en Perú es considerada una de las ciudades más peligrosas del mundo, con altos índices de crimen y violencia cotidiana.
  • ⚠️ Los habitantes y las autoridades advierten sobre la presencia de tráfico de personas, robos, secuestros y asesinatos en la zona.
  • 🔫 La ciudad está plagada de armas privadas, y es común ver a la policía y civiles armados por la inestabilidad y la inseguridad.
  • ⛰️ Situada a más de 5100 metros sobre el nivel del mar, La Rinconada es conocida como la 'ciudad más alta del mundo', lo que afecta directamente la salud y el bienestar de sus habitantes.
  • 😓 La falta de oxígeno en la altitud afecta a las personas, causando dificultad para respirar, mareos y otros síntomas físicos.
  • 🗑️ El desecho y la contaminación son omnipresentes, con basura acumulada y un impacto negativo en la salud y el medio ambiente.
  • 🧭 Los 'payaqueros' son trabajadores que recorren las montañas de desecho en busca de minerales valiosos, a menudo en condiciones peligrosas y precarias.
  • 💔 El trabajo en las minas es duro y la explotación es común, con trabajadores que pasan semanas sin pago y luego reciben una semana para recolectar lo que pueden.
  • 🍻 La ciudad también enfrenta problemas de adicción y vicios, con un flujo constante de alcohol de contrabando y coca que se utiliza para lidiar con el altitud.
  • 🏥 La falta de infraestructura médica adecuada y el personal sanitario sobrepasado describen las dificultades para brindar atención médica en una zona con altos niveles de accidentes y violencia.
  • 🏨 La proliferación de hoteles baratos, a menudo denominados 'mataderos', refleja la naturaleza temporal y a veces explotadora de la vida en La Rinconada.

Q & A

  • ¿Cuál es la principal amenaza en la ciudad de Rinconada, según el guion?

    -La principal amenaza es la violencia y el crimen, incluyendo tráfico de personas, robos, secuestros y asesinatos.

  • ¿Por qué la ciudad de Rinconada es considerada peligrosa para la policía?

    -Es peligrosa debido a la alta incidencia de crimen y violencia, y existen lugares que incluso la policía no se atreve a entrar.

  • ¿Cómo afecta la altitud a las personas que viven o trabajan en Rinconada?

    -La alta altitud hace que las personas se sientan corto de aliento, mareadas y afecta su salud en general debido a la escasez de oxígeno.

  • ¿Qué tipo de actividades económicos predominan en Rinconada?

    -La principal actividad económica es la minería, especialmente la búsqueda de oro, y también se menciona el trabajo de los payaqueros que recogen minerales de los residuos de la minería.

  • ¿Qué es un payaquero y qué hacen en Rinconada?

    -Un payaquero es alguien que busca en los residuos de la minería, intentando encontrar algo de valor, como minerales o oro.

  • ¿Cómo describirían las condiciones de trabajo en las minas de Rinconada?

    -Las condiciones de trabajo son muy duras, con largas jornadas de trabajo sin salario y períodos de cachorreo, donde los trabajadores se quedan con lo que recolectan.

  • ¿Qué es el 'cachorreo' y cómo afecta a los trabajadores de las minas?

    -El 'cachorreo' es un sistema en el que los trabajadores de las minas no tienen un salario fijo y, después de trabajar 35 a 40 días sin paga, tienen una semana para trabajar y mantener lo que generan.

  • ¿Por qué la comunidad de Rinconada puede tener una mentalidad tóxica en relación con el gasto del dinero?

    -Se cree que el chinchilico, una deidad que se cree que gobierna la mina, brinda engaños o piedras que parecen oro a aquellos cuyo dinero se destina a fines nobles, lo que promueve el gasto en vicios.

  • ¿Cómo se describen las condiciones de vida en Rinconada en términos de residuos y basura?

    -La ciudad está llena de residuos y basura, lo que indica una falta de gestión y responsabilidad por parte de las autoridades.

  • ¿Qué medidas de seguridad se toman para proteger a los visitantes y trabajadores en Rinconada?

    -Los visitantes y trabajadores a menudo se mueven con equipos de seguridad armados y son cautelosos, ya que incluso los avisos de 'Parada, Orden de Fuego' indican un alto nivel de peligro.

  • ¿Cómo se vive la noche en Rinconada y por qué se recomienda no salir?

    -La noche en Rinconada es considerada peligrosa, con altos niveles de crimen y violencia, por lo que se recomienda no salir y descansar en lugar de buscar entretenimiento.

  • ¿Qué tipo de comercios y servicios se encuentran disponibles en Rinconada a pesar de las duras condiciones?

    -A pesar de las condiciones adversas, Rinconada cuenta con mercados que venden todo, desde ropa y comida hasta alcohol y servicios como gimnasios, dentistas y hoteles.

  • ¿Cómo se describen las condiciones de salud y seguridad en la ciudad de Rinconada?

    -Las condiciones de salud y seguridad son precarias, con un centro de salud con recursos limitados y una comunidad que enfrenta constantemente la violencia y la falta de seguridad.

  • ¿Cuáles son las consecuencias de las actividades de minería en la vida de los habitantes de Rinconada?

    -Las actividades de minería afectan negativamente la vida de los habitantes, con riesgos de accidentes industriales, exposición a sustancias tóxicas y una economía basada en la incertidumbre del 'cachorreo'.

  • ¿Qué desafíos enfrentan los trabajadores que mantienen la conectividad en Rinconada?

    -Los trabajadores que mantienen la conectividad enfrentan desafíos como el clima frío y la alta altitud, y deben trabajar en condiciones extremas para asegurar que la comunidad esté conectada.

Outlines

00:00

🏙️ Vida en la ciudad más alta del mundo

El primer párrafo introduce a Rinconada, Perú, como la ciudad más alta del mundo, con un ambiente peligroso y una falta de oxígeno. Se menciona la presencia de tráfico de personas, el uso de armas privadas y las duras condiciones de trabajo en las minas. Los residentes, conocidos como payaqueros, buscan tesoros en la basura, mientras que la ciudad enfrenta problemas de salud y altos niveles de delincuencia. La llegada del equipo de seguridad armado y la sensación de peligro que genera la presencia de señales de 'Parada y disparo' se destacan como elementos clave.

05:01

🍻 La vida nocturna y los desafíos de la ciudad

El segundo párrafo explora la vida nocturna en La Rinconada, donde la bebida y la coca son comunes para lidiar con la altitud. Se discuten los riesgos de consumir alcohol de contrabando y la venta de coca por puñados. La presencia de centros de compra de oro, la venta de oro dañado y los peligros de transportar oro son mencionados. Además, se describe la dinámica de la ciudad, con su mercado, hoteles, y la lucha de la comunidad por encontrar oro, a pesar de las condiciones peligrosas y la falta de servicios básicos como agua caliente y hospitales adecuados.

10:02

🏔️ Condiciones extremas y la búsqueda del oro

El tercer párrafo se adentra en las duras condiciones de trabajo en las minas, donde los mineros enfrentan la falta de oxígeno y la delincuencia. Se describe la creencia en el 'chinchilico', una deidad que se cree que guía a los mineros hacia el oro, pero que también promueve el gasto en vicios. La difícil tarea de los mineros, la presencia de prostitutas y la explotación de las prostitutas son temas centrales, junto con la dificultad de encontrar alojamiento decente y la lucha diaria de los trabajadores por sobrevivir en este ambiente hostil.

15:05

❄️ La vida en la zona de hielo y los desafíos de la altura

El último párrafo relata la experiencia en la zona de hielo de la ciudad, donde los trabajadores enfrentan el frío extremo y el riesgo de deslizamientos de tierra. Se muestra la vida en la cima de la ciudad, con la llegada de trabajadores que mantienen las antenas de telefonía, y se reflexiona sobre la dureza de la vida en estas condiciones. El párrafo concluye con la admiración por el coraje de aquellos que se enfrentan a estos desafíos cotidianos y la triste realidad de la vida en La Rinconada.

Mindmap

Keywords

💡Rinconada

Rinconada es el nombre de la ciudad en Perú que es considerada la más alta del mundo y una de las más peligrosas. En el video, se menciona que es un lugar donde la falta de oxígeno, las condiciones de salud y los altos niveles de crimen son preocupantes, reflejando el tema central del video sobre la vida en un entorno extremo y peligroso.

💡Oxígeno

El oxígeno es un elemento esencial para la vida humana, y en la ciudad de Rinconada hay una escasez debido a su altitud. El video destaca cómo la baja concentración de oxígeno afecta a las personas, causando dificultad para respirar y mareos, y cómo esto es un desafío diario para los habitantes y trabajadores de la ciudad.

💡Crimen

El crimen es un tema recurrente en el video, donde se menciona que Rinconada es una de las ciudades más peligrosas del mundo. Ejemplos de delitos mencionados incluyen tráfico de personas, robos, secuestros y asesinatos, resaltando la inseguridad que viven los habitantes y los desafíos que presenta la vida en esta ciudad.

💡Trabajo en minas

El trabajo en las minas es una fuente principal de empleo en Rinconada, pero con condiciones laborales extremas y peligrosas. El video describe cómo los trabajadores en las minas enfrentan periodos prolongados de trabajo sin salario, seguido de una semana para recolectar lo que pueden, reflejando las duras condiciones de vida y la pobreza que afecta a la población.

💡Cachorreo

El 'cachorreo' es un término utilizado para describir el sistema de pago en las minas, donde los trabajadores no reciben un salario fijo, sino que se les permite recolectar lo que encuentran durante una semana después de haber trabajado sin paga. Este concepto ilustra la precariedad y la inestabilidad de la vida laboral en Rinconada.

💡Contaminación

La contaminación es un problema significativo en Rinconada, como se muestra en el video con la presencia de basura y desperdicios en las calles y alrededores. Los trabajadores denominados 'payaqueros' buscan tesoros entre los residuos, destacando el impacto del trabajo minero en el medio ambiente y la vida de las personas.

💡Humanidad

La humanidad se refleja en el video a través de las historias de las personas que luchan por la vida en Rinconada. Desde los trabajadores de las minas hasta los habitantes que se enfrentan a la pobreza y la violencia, el video muestra la resiliencia y la lucha por la supervivencia en condiciones extremas.

💡Chinchilico

El 'chinchilico' es una deidad o entidad que, según la creencia popular entre los mineros, gobierna la mina y a quien se le ofrecen tributos para obtener su favor y revelar los lugares del oro. Este concepto refleja las creencias y prácticas culturales que coexisten con la dura realidad del trabajo minero.

💡Tráfico de personas

El tráfico de personas es un crimen grave que también se menciona en el video, donde se destaca cómo muchas mujeres son engañadas y obligadas a trabajar en condiciones de esclavitud, ilustrando la grave problemática social y la explotación humana que ocurre en Rinconada.

💡Vida en riesgo

La vida en riesgo es un tema omnipresente en el video, no solo por la violencia y el crimen, sino también por las condiciones de trabajo peligrosas y la falta de infraestructura básica, como el agua caliente y servicios de salud adecuados, lo que subraya la precariedad de la existencia en Rinconada.

💡Altruismo

A pesar de las adversidades, el video también muestra actos de altruismo, como el trabajo de los trabajadores de la salud y la gente que se ocupa de las antenas de telefonía, quienes se enfrentan a condiciones extremas para mantener conectados a otros y brindar servicios esenciales, mostrando un lado positivo de la humanidad en medio de la difícil realidad de Rinconada.

Highlights

En esta ciudad hay lugares a los que ni la policía se atreve a entrar.

La Rinconada, Perú, es la ciudad más alta del mundo, con más de cinco mil metros sobre el nivel del mar.

La ciudad es peligrosa debido a la falta de aire, las malas condiciones de salud y los altos niveles de criminalidad.

Se reportan delitos como tráfico de personas, robos, secuestros y asesinatos.

El trabajo en las minas es extremadamente duro, con jornadas laborales que pueden durar hasta 45 días seguidos sin pago.

Muchos trabajadores dependen del 'cachorreo', un sistema en el que pueden quedarse con lo que logran extraer durante una semana.

La ciudad está llena de basura, lo que refleja la negligencia de las autoridades.

Hay una presencia significativa de armas en la ciudad, tanto entre civiles como en la policía.

El alcohol de contrabando y el consumo de hoja de coca son comunes en la ciudad.

El comercio de oro es una actividad central en La Rinconada, con numerosos centros de compra y procesamiento de oro.

La prostitución y el tráfico de personas son problemas serios en la ciudad, especialmente en los numerosos hoteles conocidos como 'mataderos'.

Los mineros realizan ofrendas al 'chinchilico', una deidad de la mina, con la esperanza de encontrar oro.

La ciudad tiene uno de los campos de fútbol más altos del mundo.

El aire es más delgado y el frío es intenso en los puntos más altos de la ciudad, lo que hace que la vida sea aún más dura.

A pesar de las duras condiciones, muchas personas siguen buscando oro en La Rinconada con la esperanza de mejorar su vida.

Transcripts

play00:00

In this city there are spots that even the police dare not enter. Very commonly

play00:03

you see warnings that someone might shoot you, that you might be lynched.

play00:07

People are killed just like that, at any time of the day, not just one night.

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Mostly there is human trafficking here. They all carry weapons, private weapons.

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The working conditions at more than five thousand m above sea level are very

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different. One feels short of breath in the highest city in the world.

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Few places have made as much of an impact on me as this one.

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We are in Rinconada Peru, the highest city in the world and, therefore, the one

play00:36

with the least oxygen.

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And yes, I can honestly tell you, you can really feel the change in altitude. If

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you walk too fast, you get upset and start to feel short of breath, you start to

play00:46

get dizzy.

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This city is dangerous in many ways, the first being, of course, the lack of

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air, the second, the poor health conditions and the third, the high levels of

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crime that are reported.

play00:57

There is much talk of human trafficking, robberies, kidnappings, murders, just

play01:03

to name a few.

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First impressions upon arriving here is that there is too much garbage.

play01:09

In fact, we are seeing it right here, a product of negligence on the part of the

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authorities, who perhaps just come to pick up some of the garbage from the town

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and throw it away.

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Among the garbage we see people known as payaqueros working.

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They search through the garbage, trying to find something of value, especially

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any minerals that might be left over.

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In fact, it is not only what you see, but a lot of mine waste, because as this

play01:34

is a mining town for a long time, people come from all over the continent,

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trying to find the dream, to find some gold, and the payaqueros scrape all kinds

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of waste, praying to have some luck to be able to find something of great value.

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During the days we will be here, we will be very careful. We come with an armed

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security team, we are looking everywhere.

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Because yes, the simple fact that here behind my back there is a sign that says

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stop, order to fire, it does make me a little nervous, I won't lie to you.

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Well, come on, we have a great journey ahead of us, the corner is waiting for

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us, let's go for it.

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As I was telling you, this is a mining town where gold is mostly sought.

play02:21

Being more than five one hundred m above sea level, in some areas five four

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hundred m above sea level, the working conditions are very hard.

play02:30

In addition to this, there is the cold and also the certainly immoral working hours.

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Most of the people who work in the mines do not have fixed schedules as such and

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there is a system in which they work for thirty-five to forty days without any

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kind of pay and then they are given a week to work freely and be able to keep

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what they generate during those days.

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There is no salary as such, they are quite severe conditions.

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Well, here the working days are forty to forty-five days and they give you the

play03:00

cachorreo payment, as cachorreo they give you.

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Cachorreo is you keep what you work with, right? Sure, it's what you get or if

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you get lucky, you get lucky, if you don't get lucky, you don't get lucky.

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How many days of puppyhood do you have?

play03:11

One week only.

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That's the way we work here at Minas Rincónada.

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Now I am struck by all the talk about this city, that there is a lot of crime,

play03:19

that it is one of the most dangerous cities in the world. Is this true? Let's

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talk to some locals.

play03:24

It's counter-dangerous, it's like a no man's land, people are killed as if

play03:27

nothing happened.

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At any time of the day, not only at night? No, it is too dangerous, as you said

play03:32

a moment ago, any time of the day, especially at night, you can't go for a walk.

play03:37

People from abroad do not know the reality here and it is very dangerous, to be honest.

play03:43

For example, the shootings, when people run for their lives for fear of being

play03:48

hit by a bullet.

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Have you ever been involved in a scary situation like this?

play03:53

Yes, at any time. For example, that could happen right now.

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At any time.

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At any time, it is unexpected.

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What kind of crimes do you hear about? Do you hear what happens here, on a daily basis?

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Mostly, here there is human trafficking, robberies, assaults, mostly for the

play04:06

mineral, which is gold.

play04:08

Hey, officer, I'm curious, do you see civilians with guns here on a daily basis?

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Or why are you carrying such a big gun?

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Look, most of the people here carry weapons, private weapons.

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For our safety, that's why we carry that vest, which is the AKM, and with two

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caserinas. With that we protect ourselves. And there are always confrontations

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at night, in the morning. At any time there is a confrontation.

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And look, here we see that some of the police also carry another type of gun.

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What type of gun is this?

play04:34

Prieto Bereta pistol.

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Prieto Bereta? And this one is like a shotgun, isn't it? A shotgun with a

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recoil-operated shotgun.

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I'm getting impressed by the amount of bootleg alcohol you find in the stores.

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For example, look at this one, Bacardi Limon, there with the girl in a thong.

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Clearly, this was not made in the Bacardi factory. And yes, you see all kinds,

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all brands, handmade vodka, everywhere.

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They tell me that it is not original, but that it doesn't make you blind either,

play05:03

that you can drink it, that it is delicious.

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There are liquors for the mine, coke, cigarettes, everything. They take it to

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the holy land or to the east, to the guichita, as they say.

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And the coca leaves, what are they sold as per handful?

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Yes, they are sold for five, for three soles.

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That's all they take for the day.

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And tell me, here in La Rinconada, is there a lot of drinking? Do people drink a lot?

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Yes, sometimes they come down from the mine and go over there, to the corner.

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Drinking there, they spend money.

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Yeah, I mean, you would say it's the activity. Normally. Hey, for the altitude,

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what do you recommend? A lot of coca leaf or what?

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That's right, the coquita leaf is always for the height.

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So, with this I chew and it goes.

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Yes, the coquita is always good for the altitude.

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Hey, what about here at night? What at night, what do you recommend me to do?

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Where can I go to have fun?

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Let's just go to sleep, because it is dangerous here.

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There are discos, but no, no, no. I recommend that you just rest.

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In the downtown area of the city there are many gold buying centers, but

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everywhere. All these places have signs about this.

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The term legal weight, exact weight, is used a lot. You also see a lot of stalls

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that say they buy spoiled gold or fix spoiled gold.

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This means that it is gold mixed with more minerals, which is not the purest gold.

play06:14

So, in these places they offer you the service of maybe melting it down, maybe

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extracting it, so that you can then sell it in another better stall or go to

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another neighboring community and get maybe a better price.

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The more you travel out of the corner, the better price you can get.

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It depends on each mining company, sometimes, mostly when it is a lot, it is

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convenient for them to take it to other places, but it is also risky to take it

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because there are many stops and sometimes even the rateras themselves dress up

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as police, they take you to the police station and there is no more gold and you

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can't go and complain to anyone.

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And look how curious it is what we are seeing. A big truck is going to pass by

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right now and, evidently, it covers the whole street.

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So, my friend here, who has her stall, what they have to do is to remove it and

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now the truck can pass.

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It's good, look what an interesting dynamic the workers have here on a daily

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basis in the corner.

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And you can really find everything, there are markets that sell shoes, clothes,

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food of all kinds, fresh meat, cooked food, liquor stores, there are gyms, there

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are dentists and hotels.

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Yes, there are hotels, but there are a lot of them everywhere.

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This is due to the fact that many people come for short terms, they come maybe

play07:25

for two weeks to try their luck, then they decide to stay maybe for two months,

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maybe for six months.

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So, they are all quick rental contracts. That's why there are so many hotels

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everywhere and also because being a mining town, of course there is a lot of

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prostitution and these kind of hotels are colloquially called slaughterhouses.

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So, you see streets full, but full of hotels, hostels, you see it everywhere and

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in a very daily way.

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You see all over the place these kinds of signs that prohibit littering, but

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people don't seem to pay much attention to them. Everything here is full of

play07:56

garbage, but full of garbage.

play07:58

All these pipes are used to carry water to different parts, either from the

play08:02

towns or from the mining centers to work.

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And this community we are seeing is called Lunar de Oro, with about two,zero

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people who are living there in very scarce conditions, struggling, pursuing the

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dream of finding a little gold.

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Listen, and no matter how much we come with police and everything, there is a

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certain point that they no longer go down, from here it is already a little more

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no man's land. So, yes, look, not even the police want to enter.

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It tells you a lot about this colony in front of our eyes. We came across a

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trail of blood of someone who was possibly being chased on his way to the health center.

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See how here are the drops, this is the biggest stain, this is where he lost the

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most blood and there are even some stray bullets in the no parking sign.

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Did he survive? Who knows, because the only health center in La Rincónada is

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quite scarce.

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Even they don't have hot water or drinking water. I am a doctor zero.

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I am doing my social service for one year.

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what types of cases are commonly seen here at the health center?

play08:58

Industrial accidents, assaults, impact by firearms.

play09:01

We have had quite a few.

play09:02

what has been the hardest part of serving here?

play09:06

The hardest thing, I think, is the fear of something happening to you, the

play09:11

insecurity that exists here.

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We don't know at what exact moment an emergency is going to arrive, it could be

play09:17

three in the morning, one in the morning, and you are obliged to attend to it.

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Yes, there is no doubt that the people who work here face very tough challenges

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every day.

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To get fuel, the nearest gas stations are such a half-hour drive.

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So, what people do is they go to little stores that sell gasoline or diesel in

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little bottles, like soda, either for the electricity generators or for the cars

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or motorcycles that drive around the city.

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Public restroom signs are everywhere. This is because most of the rooms that

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workers rent do not have showers, and if they do, they do not have hot water.

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Now, bathing in one of these really is very expensive. They charge you for a

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shower for about ten, twenty minutes, ten which equals about three dollars.

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That's why there is a joke in the community that bathing in the rinconada is an

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option, it's not a necessity.

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I have been working here at the mine for four months. The high demand for work

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here is a bit strong, so I had to manage to work here in the mines.

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Since I'm from Puno, the climate hardly shocks me, but sometimes the delinquency

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is just a little bit scary and that's all.

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And what are you looking for here, gold or what?

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Yes, here in the dismantled mine we are looking for gold.

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How are you doing? Have you had any luck finding it?

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It can be said to be somewhat regular.

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There are other people who always find a good amount at the least amount of

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time. I've had almost regular luck, I won't say that I've had a lot or a low

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amount either.

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You are also against your health because of the altitude. Obviously the blood,

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lacking oxygen, thickens.

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We can suffer from many diseases, so in order to oxygenate, I also go to the

play11:02

city, to another place to work.

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We managed to enter a gold mine. It is important to enter safely, because they

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tell me that even inside the mines many crimes happen, that criminals wait for

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you inside, they wait for the miners, they assault them.

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So, yes, we are very cautious. Right here we meet a chinchilico, known in other

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regions also as the uncle, also as the grandfather.

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It has many interpretations, but to simplify it, let's say it is the deity, the

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incomprehensible that governs the mine.

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Every morning the workers leave an offering, it can be alcohol, it can be coca

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leaves, etcetera, etcetera, with the hope that the chinchilico will show them

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where there is gold.

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Now, where it gets murky, is that all this represents a very toxic mentality,

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very twisted, in which the miners believe that the chinchilico sees your

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intentions and your intentions with the money you find, with whatever you find,

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have to be bad, they have to see in your eyes that you are going to spend it on

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prostitutes, on alcohol, on vices.

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Because if the chinchilico sees in your eyes that you are going to spend it on

play11:58

your family, that you are saving for a better future, what he is going to do is

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to make fun of you and simply give you deceit, he will give you fake gold, he

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will give you a golden stone that looks like gold, but it is not, he is going to

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make fun of you.

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So, this explains in large part why there is so much vice in this town, because

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people fall into this mentality that what I earn, the chinchilico says it has to

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be for vice.

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It is through this type of holes, with very tight holes, that the miners enter

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and walk up to a kilometer, even more, to get to the area where they have to

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begin to mine.

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This type of stone is what they call the deceitful one, that when one is a

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novice who does not know it, he goes with the pretence and says: No mames, I

play12:33

have already become a millionaire, I have already found it.

play12:36

And when you go to sell it, man, it's just a shiny rock. Your dick! And it feels

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really cold here. And that's because we have lowered a small percentage of what

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the miners lower.

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That's why you always see them with their overalls on, very fat, very thick, to

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be able to withstand these conditions.

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We ventured out into the streets at night to see what the vice scene is like

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and, honestly, I must say it's pretty shady.

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In several places they wouldn't let me in just because I was me, which makes it

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even more obvious that there are things going on in these places that they don't

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want the world to know about.

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And, what can I tell you, there are so many bars, nightclubs. Where it gets

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heavier is when you go into bars that offer the company of girls.

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It is well known that there is a lot of human trafficking here and it is very

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sad to see it.

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Many of these girls are brought to la rincónada by deception, they promise them

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some well paid work contract and when they arrive they take their IDs, put them

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to work and charge them debts with interest that are practically unpayable.

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Very harsh, a very disturbing secret that runs through the town loudly. After

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that, we found lodging for the night that cost us $fifteen.

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Very complicated to find lodgings with bathrooms, hot water, not to mention,

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that is an extremely complicated mission.

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And now, starting a new day, we are about to climb Sleeping Beauty, this snowy

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mountain that receives that colloquial name, because in effect its rocks seem to

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give the shape of a woman sleeping face up.

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And we're climbing a mountain practically made of garbage. Everything around

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here is lined with waste.

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It must get pretty cold in these houses. Look at how they're built. Check it

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out, the whole house is built on wooden poles.

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Any little thing there, any little tremor, any failure, the house falls down

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amidst the mountain of garbage.

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This is a warning to thieves from the community, basically saying: If we catch

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you stealing or doing something wrong, you will end up hanging like that guy.

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It also prohibits the use of balaclavas so that no one wants to cover their

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identity and act smart.

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And the sign at the top is the most disturbing of all: Order to shoot, do not

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stop. Wow! In the neighborhood they even have a soccer field.

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It's quite possible that this is the highest soccer field in the whole world.

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It's not cool, not even in the highest city in the world. There is a pretext for

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not playing sports.

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We enter a mill area where you can see all the machines working. Likewise, here,

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from the viewpoint, you can see how every house has its milling machine.

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These are very harsh conditions. You do have to wear a mask, a good mask,

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because if you don't, your lungs are damaged little by little. Suddenly, the

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other side of the corner that we saw starts to look beautiful.

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Here life is much rougher, it is much dirtier, much more chaotic. The working

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conditions are completely different.

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No, this is a darker side of the corner.

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We arrived at the ice zone. From here we can analyze how all this thaw feeds the

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people of the rinconada, whether for work or for human consumption. And yes, it

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feels very cold.

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One of the greatest risks are landslides, landslides, because if it falls on

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you, it will not only be ice, snow, but it will be all the stone, all the

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machinery that humans have left here.

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It is estimated that twenty people lose their lives every year in this way.

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We can see from here how there are people who go up to these heights to mine,

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because they believe that no one else is going to get here and that the

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expensive mineral could be here.

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In fact, in the distance we can see one of the payaqueros' camps. Some may live

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there. Most of them just use it as a shelter when a lot of snow falls or when it

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is very cold.

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But yes, let's not rule out that some will live there in those conditions.

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The great majority of those of us who work here come to work in the Riticucho

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area, we collect minerals here or the paliaqueras paliaqueras paliaqueamos.

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As the people say, here are the people who are very strong. What we do is to

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keep warm, sometimes with thermal clothing.

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Look I have done glacier hikes and the like in the past, but this has been the

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most extreme for very obvious reasons.

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No shit. People who have to do this every day and who are told: Work thirty-five

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days for free and then next week see what you get out of it.

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No, no shit, this is a very hard reflection. Now we have reached the highest

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point of the corner. From here we can see everything.

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From here it is very cold, the air is much thinner. Wow! It has been a hard hike

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physically, but certainly much harder emotionally.

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And who would have thought that up to this point we would meet some carnals here

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who come to work fixing the telephone antennas.

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Do you often come to this area?

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We come when the antenna fails, when there is an incident, we have to come here.

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And it is a bit tragic because you see the altitude, the cold.

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And well, every time it fails, we have to come, yes or yes, to repair the antenna.

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Any time, sometimes it fails at night, sometimes during the day.

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Wow, what hard work. So, know that all the workers who live there are able to

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stay connected to their families because of the work you do.

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So, it is a great job and I want to applaud you because not everyone takes the

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plunge. I applaud you very much.

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Well, there you have it, a little bit of the corner of Peru, a city that I

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define as shocking in every sense of the word and that has given me a very cold

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bath of reality.

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Thank you for joining me. See you, as always, as you know, in a few days with a

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new video. Goodbye.

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