Taxis light up remote airstrip in Peru for emergency flight

Their lights blaring in the night, hundreds of taxis lined an unlit airstrip in a jungle region of Peru so an emergency medevac plane with three very sick patients could take off.

April 05, 2013

Khalid Al-Suliman



LIMA — Their lights blaring in the night, hundreds of taxis lined an unlit airstrip in a jungle region of Peru so an emergency medevac plane with three very sick patients could take off.



All three survived after the 300-odd drivers of motorcycles fashioned into small taxis with compartments for passengers heeded a call Wednesday night from a radio station to race to the 800-meter airstrip in Contamana, in one of Peru’s poorest regions, Peruvian media reported Thursday.



The airstrip is not equipped for nocturnal flights because it has no lights.



The patients were a woman and her newborn, both with serious problems after delivery, and a man with a tropical disease.



“We have always been people with a heart,” said Adolfo Lobo, the radio presenter who put out the call for help.



Contamana, a town of 26,000, has a hospital with no equipment for emergency situations and the airport is rudimentary. — AFP


April 05, 2013
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