Colombia: Drug lord's
decaying paradise
decaying paradise
By
Amy Rosenfeld Thursday Aug 9, 2012
Tourists can now wander freely
around the former holiday mansion of infamous cocaine trafficker Pablo Escobar,
writes Amy Rosenfeld.
The swimming pool at Pablo Escobar's former holiday mansion Photo / Amy Rosenfeld |
Standing on the second-storey
balcony of the crumbling, charred lakeside nightclub, it's difficult to imagine
this was once the playground of one of the world's most notorious drug lords.
Pablo Escobar's bar - or remnants
of it - jut out onto the abandoned dance floor. What was built to be the center
of the party, where Colombia's underbelly cooked up drugs and plots, now rests
under layers of dust and graffiti.
Over the hill, Escobar's holiday
mansion is in even worse shape.
The swimming pool, inlaid with an
elaborate mosaic pattern, is filled with rainwater and debris, the domed roof
of the entranceway lies cracked on the earth, spindly trees fighting to grow
through the rubble.
But the mansion's key draw card
remains virtually unchanged from when Escobar and his entourage ruled these
shores: a glittering, panoramic view of the expansive Lake Guatapé.
The solitary difference is that the
lake surface, once used as a landing strip for drug-laden planes, is now heavy
with holidaymakers on powerboats and jet skis.
Since Escobar's getaway was bombed
by his rivals, the Cali Cartel, in 1992, the site has been left to mold and
decay.
But one of the world's richest and
most-wanted men once called this place his paradise. And it's not hard to see
why.
Known as "the town of
Zócalos" after the brightly-painted square tiles that skirt each cottage,
Guatapé has a quaint, small-town feel. It's only two hours away from the
party-haven of Medellín, but very far removed in all other respects.
The town of 11,000 people offers
the perfect spot for any traveler looking to enjoy some time on the water,
while avoiding the suffocating heat and hustlers that plague Colombia's coastal
towns.
Midweek, the stalls selling snacks
and souvenirs are quiet, and the lake-spanning zipline is closed. But on long
weekends, which seem as common as arepas and coffee in Colombia, guests spill
out of the few hostels and hotels and into the welcoming arms of tour guides.
Unlike tourist hotspots like
Tayrona or Taganga, however, the majority of holidaymakers come from no further
than Bogota or Cartagena.
Somehow, Guatapé seems to have
avoided becoming part of Colombia's 'Gringo trail', but the increasing numbers
of foreign day trippers from Medellín suggest it may not stay this way for
long.
The lake, in reality a huge
hydro-electric dam, encompasses dozens of islands, endless hidden coves, and
one underwater town.
The story goes that the residents
of Viejo Peñol, less than thrilled with the government's decision to flood
their homes to build the dam, were only convinced to leave after a bomb was set
off in the town church.
Now regular boat tours take travelers
to visit a solitary cross peeking above the lake surface, marking the place
where the church once stood . . . .
Full story in nzherald
Peter’s Piece
Pablo Emilio Escobar Gaviria (1949-1993) was a
Columbian drug lord, narco-terrorist and politician who amassed a personal
fortune of $3 billion US dollars.
He operated his own fleet of aircraft, including a
Learjet, for running cocaine into the United States. At the peak of his
drug-running, Escobar was moving half a ton of cocaine daily.
Escobar bribed, intimidated or murdered everyone who
stood in his way. His once said that people had two choices; money or bullets.
He is believed to have been responsible for the deaths of thousands of people.
He died in a hail of bullets on December 2, 1993 while
attempting to escape over roof-tops.