The Hacktivist group Anonymous or rather one of their members, released this footage from the country. Apparently, this has been happening since July in San Antonio, Peru.
It’s completely unknown what this thing is. Except that it’s moving around in different directions. And it’s big. That’s about it. More information is in the video itself.
Also let me say how ridiculous the Peruvian authorities are. They came up with the most BS cover story they could find. They claim that these are criminal organizations selling illegal gold (gold syndicates). And that they are pretending to be UFO’s by wearing Jetpacks to fly around in the sky, to keep people scared and inside their homes. In order to stop anyone from finding their gold mines.
Of course because you know, after James Bond, everyone has Jetpacks now. They claim that besides those huge lights in the sky, there are 7 foot tall entities with grey glowing skin over the area. Families who are armed, are saying that they have been shooting at these things. And the bullets don’t do anything. They seem to be invulnerable.
They claim they look like the typical Roswell Greys. Only large and with glowing skin. But it doesn’t seem that it’s a natural glow. Because at other times it’s not their skin that is glowing. But instead an orb outside of their bodies that moves around and follows them.
It’s possible that they have something within their bodies that is artificially making their skin glow. Or they really are wearing a suit of sorts. But the suit appears as if it’s skin. That’s another possibility. The question is, what are they doing there? The Amazon has a lot of natural resources.
So the only conclusion if this were an authentic alien presence, is that they are extracting something there. I doubt a wildlife study would take this long. Or that they would be so bold as to openly appear in urban areas like that. One man actually managed to capture an image on his phone.
Granted, I think all things should be properly analyzed. This image should be looked at to see if someone simply created it. Or if it’s real. The problem is our technology has created phone cameras so advanced, that we can easily fake images like this now. The old flip phones of the old century would have been better for capturing such an image.
It would have proven it wasn’t faked.
But that’s just one image. What can’t be faked is whatever this is, over the skies. Unless they’re claiming that the “gold syndicates” are now using fancy helicopters to scare the population. Pictures of them are being taken all over the area. Some look obviously fake.
Others like this one are slightly harder to disprove. If it is a hoax then someone is going to a lot of trouble to appear all over San Antonio and risk being shot at to do it. And then somehow not being effected by live rounds. And even creating dizzying lights and somehow making people sick without needing to do anything (radiation sickness?). If these are really “criminals” then I have a question or two,
Why hasn’t the military been alerted? Why aren’t they sending their forces there? And if this is happening on a border, why hasn’t the other country involved deployed them on their side of the border? And why aren’t they working together? And why isn’t mainstream media covering this?
This has been happening since July. And I only know about it right now from a YouTube video. Has it really gotten to the point? Now we all have to look to social media to know something is happening. Oh the mainstream says that we are too dependent on social media. I say, that since mass communication is now in the hands of the people, we can see and show more clearly than ever.
Now, ruling classes and governments can’t hide things from us anymore. Not even though their pawns in the corporate owned media. Who no doubt, believe that ridiculous cover story about “gangsters wearing Jetpacks” to scare the population of a town. And yet somehow none of the cops are there to stop them. They don’t even believe that.
This account was so fascinating, that I decided to translate it myself from Spanish to English, the original article in Spanish is here.
Title
The sacred ritual with a hallucinogenic tea that rescuers used to find lost children in the jungle of Colombia
With little hope of finding the four children who were missing for 40 days in the Amazon after a plane crash, the indigenous people turned to ayahuasca, and one of them predicted:
“Today we find them.”
BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — The weary indigenous men gathered at their base camp. Among towering trees and dense vegetation that forms a green sea so immense it is disorienting. They perceived that their ancestral homeland — Selva Madre — was unwilling to allow them to find the four children. Who had been missing since their charter plane crashed weeks earlier in a remote area of southern Colombia. Indigenous volunteers and military teams had found signs of hope: a bottle, half-eaten fruit, dirty diapers strewn across a wide swath of rainforest.
The men were convinced that the children had survived. But the heavy rains, rugged terrain and the passage of time had dampened their spirits and drained their energy. The weak in body, mind and faith cannot get out of this jungle. Day 39 was life or death, both for the children and for the search teams. That night at the camp, Manuel Ranoque, father of the two youngest children, resorted to one of the most sacred rituals of the Amazon’s indigenous groups.
Yagé, a bitter tea made from plants native to the rainforest, widely known as ayahuasca. For centuries, the hallucinogenic cocktail has been used as a cure for all ailments by people in Colombia, Peru, Ecuador and Brazil. Henry Guerrero, a volunteer who joined the search from the children’s village near Araracuara, told The Associated Press that his aunt prepared the yagé for the group. They believed it would induce visions that could lead them to children.
“I told them, ‘ There’s nothing to do here. At first glance we will not find them. The last element is to take yagé, ‘ “ says Guerrero, 56. “Really the trip for us is made in very special moments. It’s a very spiritual thing. For us, it’s like the last resort.”
Ranoque took a sip and the men watched for a few hours. When the psychotropic effects wore off, he told them it hadn’t worked. Some rescuers were ready to leave. But the next morning, 40 days after the accident, an elderly man drank what little was left of the yagé. Some people take it to connect with themselves, cure illnesses, or heal a broken heart.
The elder Jose Rubio was convinced he would help find the children sooner or later, Guerrero said. Rubio dreamed for a while. Vomited: a common side effect. This time, he said, it had worked. In his visions, he saw them. He told Guerrero,
“The children, today we found them.”
The four children — Lesly, Soleiny, Tien and Cristin — grew up in and around Araracuara. A small Amazonian town in the department of Caquetá. That can only be reached by boat or plane. Ranoque said the brothers had happy, but independent lives because he and his wife, Magdalena Mucutuy, were often away from home. Lesly, 13, was the mature and quiet one.
Soleiny, 9, was playful, and Tien, almost 5 years old before the accident, restless. Cristin, then 11 months old, was just learning to walk. At home, Mucutuy grew onions and cassava, using the latter to produce fariña, a type of flour, for the family to eat and sell. Lesly learned to cook at age 8. In the absence of adults, she often cared for her siblings.
On the morning of May 1, the children, their mother and an uncle boarded a plane. They were heading to the town of San José del Guaviare. Weeks earlier, Ranoque had fled his hometown, an area where illegal drug cultivation, mining and logging have thrived for decades. He told the AP he feared pressure from people connected to his work, though he declined to elaborate on the nature of his work or his business dealings.
“The work there is not safe,” Ranoque said. “And it’s illegal. It has to do with other people… in a sector that, well, I can’t mention because I put myself more at risk.”
He says that before leaving, he left Mucutuy 9 million Colombian pesos (about $2,695) to pay for food, other necessities and the charter flight. He wanted the children to leave the village because he feared they might be recruited by one of the rebel groups in the area. They were on their way to meet Ranoque when the pilot of the single-propeller Cessna declared an emergency due to engine failure. The aircraft disappeared from radar a short time later.
“Mayday, mayday, mayday… The engine failed me again… I’m going to look for a river… Here I have a river on the right,”
Pilot Hernando Murcia told air traffic control at 7:43 a.m., according to a preliminary report released by aviation authorities.
“One hundred and three miles outside of San Jose… I’m going to aquatize.”
The Colombian military began a search for the plane after it failed to reach its destination. About 10 days later, with no aircraft or signs of life found, indigenous volunteers joined the effort. They were much more familiar with the terrain and families in the area. One man told them the plane made a strange noise when it flew over their house. That helped them outline a search plan that followed the Apaporis River.
As they walked the unforgiving terrain and took breaks in groups, ants climbed on them and mosquitoes fed on their blood. One seeker almost lost an eye to a tree branch and others developed allergy- and flu-like symptoms. They kept looking. Historically, the military and indigenous groups have been at loggerheads. But deep in the jungle, after food supplies and optimism dwindled, they shared water, food, GPS equipment and satellite phones.
Via Associated Press (in Spanish)
Sixteen days after the crash, with the mood low among all search groups, rescuers found the wreckage of the aircraft. The plane appeared to have plummeted: it was found in an almost vertical position, with the front down. The group assumed the worst. The men had found the aircraft and saw human remains. Guerrero said he and others began packing things from their camp.
But one of the men who had approached the plane spoke.
“Listen,” he said, according to Guerrero. “I didn’t see the children.”
The man slowly realized that when they found the wreckage of the aircraft, they had not seen the body of any children. He had approached the aircraft and saw the children’s bags outside. He noticed that some things looked as if someone had moved them after crashing. He was right. The bodies of three adults were recovered from inside the aircraft.
But there was no sign of the children. Or indications that they were seriously injured, according to the preliminary report. The army’s special operations forces changed their strategy based on evidence that the children might be alive. They no longer moved silently through the jungle.
“That’s where the second phase begins,” says First Sergeant Juan Carlos Rojas Sisa. “We went from the stealth part to the noise part so that they would already hear us.”
They shouted Lesly’s name. And played a recorded message from the children’s maternal grandmother. Asking them in Spanish and the language of the Huitoto people to stay in one place. Several helicopters dropped boxes of food and flyers with messages. The military also brought in trained dogs, including a Belgian Malinois shepherd named Wilson who did not return to his caregiver and is still missing.
On the ground, about 120 soldiers and more than 70 indigenous people searched for the children, day and night. They left whistles for children to use if they found them and marked about 6.8 miles (11 kilometers) with tape similar to crime scenes. Hoping the children would take the marks as a sign to stay in place. They began finding clues to the children’s location, including a footprint they believed was Lesly’s, but no one could find the children. Some rescuers had already walked more than 1,500 kilometers (930 miles) — the distance between Lisbon and Paris or between Dallas and Chicago.
Exhaustion was beginning to weigh and the military implemented a plan to rotate the soldiers. Guerrero made a call and asked for the yagé. It arrived two days later. On day 40, after Elder Rubio drank the yagé, rescuers combed the jungle again from the site where they found the diapers. His vision had rekindled hopes, but he did not provide details on where the children might be.
The groups deployed in different directions, but as the day progressed, they returned to base camp with no news. Sadness descended upon the camp. Guerrero told Ranoque when the teams returned:
“Nothing. We couldn’t… There is nothing.”
Then came the news. A soldier radioed that the four children had been found, 3 miles (5 kilometers) from the crash site, in a small clearing. Rescuers had passed between 20 and 50 meters (66 to 164 feet) from there on several occasions, but did not see them. The soldier informed Guerrero, who ran toward Ranoque.
” They found all four of them,” she said through tears and hugs.
A helicopter pulled the children out of the dense forest. They were first airlifted to San José del Guaviare and then to the capital, Bogotá. Each with a team of health professionals. They were covered with insulated aluminum foil blankets and given intravenous lines due to dehydration. His hands and feet showed scratches and insect bites. Ranoque said Lesly reported that his mother died about four days after the crash.
The children survived by collecting water in a soda bottle and eating cassava flour, fruits and seeds. They were found with two small bags of clothes, a towel, a flashlight, two telephones and a music box. Tien and Cristin had birthdays while rescuers searched for them. All four remain in the hospital. A custody fight has broken out, with some relatives claiming Ranoque was violent toward the children’s mother.
He has admitted to occasional verbal and physical fights, which he called “a private family matter.” He has also said that he has not been able to see the two older children. Officials, medical professionals, special forces and others have praised Lesly’s leadership. She and her siblings have become a symbol of resilience and survival around the world. The Colombian government, meanwhile, has highlighted cooperation between indigenous communities and the armed forces in their bid to end national conflicts.
“The mother jungle gave them back,” President Gustavo Petro declared. “They are children of the jungle and now they are children of Colombia.”
That’s true, Ranoque told the AP. But they were also saved by indigenous culture and rituals. He credits the yagé and the vision of the old man in his group.
“This is a spiritual world,” he said, and the yagé “is of utmost respect. It is the maximum concentration that is made in our spiritual world as an indigenous people. That’s why they drank the tea in the jungle, he said, “It’s like for the goblin, the cursed devil, to let go of my children.”