Google – AFP, Ariela Navarro (AFP), 25 January 2014
Picture
showing the Metrocable cable railway in Santo Domingo neighbourhood
in
Medellin, Antioquia department, Colombia, on January 5, 2014 (AFP/File,
Fredy
Amariles Garcia)
|
Medellín —
Medellin's "cable car of the poor," soaring over the slums of
Colombia's second largest city, has revolutionized this former drug lord
fiefdom and inspired other violent Latin American cities.
The city of
2.5 million, long considered one of the most dangerous places on the planet,
has seen crime rates fall and neighborhood life return thanks to new public
services in some of its poorest areas.
At the
center of the strategy to reclaim the slums is a transportation system that now
includes subways, the cable car, hillside escalators and even public libraries
at metro stations.
Picture
showing the Metrocable cable
railway in Santo Domingo neighbourhood
in Medellin,
Antioquia department,
Colombia, on January 5, 2014 (AFP/
File, Fredy Amariles
Garcia)
|
"Before,
the people of the hillside slums would say, 'I'm going down to Medellin.' Now
they feel part of the city," he said.
At the
Acevedo station, where the subway and Metrocable meet, a huge library welcomes
residents from the gritty neighborhoods surrounding it -- and also tourists who
ride the cable car for the spectacular birds eye views of the city.
"This
was a very violent neighborhood, not that busy, so there was no
transportation," Luz Valdes, at a small grocery store just outside the
station, told AFP.
"Now
there are many jobs and many tourists from far away visit the neighborhood
because it's very nice with the Metrocable and library."
'Dark, long
night'
It is all a
far cry from just a few years ago.
Medellin
went through "a dark, long and painful night", the mayor, Anibal
Gaviria, told AFP, referring to the 1990s, when the drug lord Pablo Escobar
unleashed a wave of violence.
Then, the
city had a startling homicide rate of 380 per 100,000 inhabitants and the
dubious distinction of being known as the murder capital of the world.
Last year,
the murder rate was 10 times lower according to the mayor. Other studies
support the claim that there has been a sharp drop in violence.
To change
the dynamic local governments have employed a kind of "urban
acupuncture," bringing to bear a welter of programs designed to reach long
neglected shantytowns.
With an $88
million budget in 2014, the plan provides transportation at critical points and
promotes education, culture, health and the deployment of security forces.
The Metrocable opened in 2004, and the subway system has also added on a bicycle rental service.
The Metrocable opened in 2004, and the subway system has also added on a bicycle rental service.
But the
most striking initiative is a system of outdoor escalators that has served
Comuna 13, one of the poorest and most violent areas in Medellin, since
December 2011.
Instead of
trudging up 350 concrete steps, residents take escalators now.
"Projects
such as the Metrocable, the metro, the escalators and the libraries imply the
presence of the state in places in the city that had been abandoned,"
Gaviria said.
'Cable car
of the poor'
None of
this is to say that Medellin does not still have considerable problems. In
Comuna 1, which is served by a cable car, gangs maintain a discreet presence.
But Ferney
Navarro, a resident of 32 years, told AFP: "There is more control from the
authorities.
A man walks with his mules past the
Metrocable cable railway station in
San Javier neighbourhood in Medellin,
Antioquia department, Colombia, on
January 5, 2014 (AFP/File, Fredy
Amariles Garcia)
|
A study by
Columbia University in the United States found the homicide rate in the slums
of Medellin where Metrocable serves dropped by 66 percent between 2003 and
2008.
This
decrease coincides with a sharp drop in homicides in Colombia -- from 78 per
100,000 population in 1991 to 32 in 2012.
A secret of
Medellin's success has been its ability to adapt initiatives that have worked
elsewhere in the world.
At the same
time, the city has become "an inspiration for other cities living
difficult times," said the mayor.
Thus the
Metrocable -- "the cable car of the poor" -- has been replicated in
Curitiba, in southern Brazil, and Caracas, capital of Venezuela.
Since 2010
in San Agustin del Sur, in the west of Caracas, a Metrocable carries more than
40,000 people a day on a nine-minute ride from the foot of a mountain to the
populous neighborhoods overhead.
That
initiative's success led Venezuelan authorities to begin building another cable
car serving Mariche neighborhood in February 2012.
Another is
scheduled for December this year for Petare, the largest slum in the Venezuelan
capital and one of the most overcrowded in Latin America.
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