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Guyana Chronicle New York Edition Week-ending December 23, 2016
Witnesses
Describe
Mexican
'Nightmare'
Christmas
of
Deadly
Blast
In little over a decade, the country's most celebrated fireworks market in Tultepec has blown up three times, with the latest massive blast raising serious questions about why the festive public was again exposed to such deadly risks. •BIGGEST, WORST' 'This was the biggest and the worst,' Monroy, 41, decked out in a cowboy hat and boots, said after his last escape. 'It was really loud, like a bomb. Lots of people were running and looking for help, and those we could get out, we got out.' 'There were lots of colors, I can't say it was beautiful because of the sadness and loss,' said Monroy, who has spent more than a decade making rockets and fireworks at the market. 'There are no winners here. There's nothing here.' As the wind kicked up around lunchtime, tiny funnels of wind whipped through the wasteland, lifting trash, dust and burned fragments into a series of dancing columns. Alan Jesus Chavez, a local medical student who rushed to the scene as the blasts went off and the market stalls blazed, worked to pull people out of the burning ruins. While handing out milk and water, a woman came to his side to ask him to free her baby, who was trapped under rubble. 'But when we got everything off and found the baby, it was al-
ready dead,' said Chavez, who felt the pulse of five of the people who lost their lives. 'When I got out of here and got home, I cried because of all the dead people I had seen.' MULTIPLE BLASTS The government has yet to say what sparked the tragedy, noting only that there were six separate blasts. Federal investigators pored through the wreckage for clues Wednesday. Local resident Ivan Perez, 23, whose girlfriend works at the market, said there was a rumor that the explosions began when a woman accidentally dropped a 'brujita,' a kind of banger. Such was the economic importance of the bazaar to locals, he said, that bribes were sometimes paid to sell fireworks not permitted by official regulations, Perez said. But after the third tragedy in just over a decade, the market's prospects looked grim, he added. 'I don't think it will get back on its feet,' he said. In 2005, fireworks maker Monroy was just leaving when the explosions broke out; nearly a year
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later, he was standing on a bridge overlooking the market when the sky lit up again. On Tuesday, Monroy had gone outside the surrounding fence to fix his bike when the sudden, rapid blasts began propelling huge clumps of concrete through the air. Fear gripped him because his family
were still inside, along with hundreds of others. They escaped with only a fright. Others were not so lucky. T saw a lot of charred bodies and dead. It's a nightmare that in time you forget,' Monroy said. 'The children were crying, shouting, asking for help.' —VOA
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Cuba launches Mai scheme to m allow home internet access PanARM I . \ IAN.Net—The Cuban government has announced a twomonth trial scheme to allow internet access in private homes, BBC News reports. State-run telecommunications company Etecsa will install internet in some 2,000 homes in the capital's colonial district, Old Havana. The company has also reduced by 25% the fee charged to connect to the web, which most Cubans can only access from public wi-fi hotspots. Cuba has one of the lowest online connectivity rates in the world. Many Cubans hope the country's communist government will eventually expand the scheme, says the BBC's Will Grant in Havana.
Details are scarce, but the authorities say the experiment will be extended if it is approved after the two-month trial period. Last week, Etecsa signed an agreement with Google to provide faster access to content including Gmail and YouTube. Google will install local servers that will speed up connection to its services. Much of the island's internet infrastructure is obsolete. Google and Etecsa reached agreement in the final weeks of Barack Obama's presidency, but it is not clear whether his successor, Donald Trump, will change US policies towards Cuba.
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