Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Afraid to live here': urban Bolivia's death-defying homes

EUR -
AED 3.763985
AFN 73.717676
ALL 98.215498
AMD 407.223976
ANG 1.837311
AOA 936.135011
ARS 1065.267854
AUD 1.659817
AWG 1.847146
AZN 1.743185
BAM 1.955416
BBD 2.058356
BDT 123.855669
BGN 1.95387
BHD 0.386128
BIF 3015.695859
BMD 1.024769
BND 1.401266
BOB 7.059613
BRL 6.24094
BSD 1.01943
BTN 88.407495
BWP 14.429729
BYN 3.336142
BYR 20085.466266
BZD 2.047658
CAD 1.474375
CDF 2941.085973
CHF 0.939607
CLF 0.037456
CLP 1033.151483
CNY 7.512682
CNH 7.530124
COP 4413.166351
CRC 515.118913
CUC 1.024769
CUP 27.15637
CVE 110.244419
CZK 25.27181
DJF 181.529653
DKK 7.460921
DOP 62.440171
DZD 139.259978
EGP 51.732883
ERN 15.37153
ETB 130.338255
FJD 2.38935
FKP 0.843986
GBP 0.842252
GEL 2.900022
GGP 0.843986
GHS 15.087183
GIP 0.843986
GMD 73.783561
GNF 8815.526288
GTQ 7.867531
GYD 213.270185
HKD 7.978275
HNL 25.926172
HRK 7.56233
HTG 133.087751
HUF 412.297183
IDR 16719.664752
ILS 3.718845
IMP 0.843986
INR 88.705669
IQD 1335.476745
IRR 43142.761424
ISK 144.708002
JEP 0.843986
JMD 159.806404
JOD 0.726865
JPY 161.993353
KES 132.656189
KGS 89.615971
KHR 4120.311198
KMF 493.887376
KPW 922.291932
KRW 1497.883773
KWD 0.316285
KYD 0.84955
KZT 541.244237
LAK 22246.281038
LBP 91729.114086
LKR 300.449773
LRD 191.136182
LSL 19.537643
LTL 3.025876
LVL 0.619872
LYD 5.057155
MAD 10.301776
MDL 19.113898
MGA 4801.244217
MKD 61.47673
MMK 3328.408722
MNT 3482.164109
MOP 8.176294
MRU 40.481628
MUR 48.204885
MVR 15.791354
MWK 1767.721736
MXN 21.16923
MYR 4.616577
MZN 65.493249
NAD 19.537643
NGN 1584.743751
NIO 37.513729
NOK 11.710975
NPR 141.455733
NZD 1.831564
OMR 0.394526
PAB 1.0194
PEN 3.844645
PGK 4.090316
PHP 60.231794
PKR 284.015164
PLN 4.272824
PYG 8025.658332
QAR 3.716506
RON 4.975049
RSD 117.12595
RUB 105.681833
RWF 1426.1755
SAR 3.846605
SBD 8.652303
SCR 14.831994
SDG 615.885835
SEK 11.506994
SGD 1.403984
SHP 0.843986
SLE 23.211366
SLL 21488.886902
SOS 582.613974
SRD 35.969893
STD 21210.642822
SVC 8.919422
SYP 13324.042454
SZL 19.519118
THB 35.651349
TJS 11.142129
TMT 3.596938
TND 3.297184
TOP 2.400113
TRY 36.372326
TTD 6.920708
TWD 33.822392
TZS 2587.541273
UAH 43.210298
UGX 3770.296128
USD 1.024769
UYU 44.542119
UZS 13223.4023
VES 55.080981
VND 26018.876964
VUV 121.662596
WST 2.8702
XAF 655.853759
XAG 0.034467
XAU 0.000384
XCD 2.769489
XDR 0.785776
XOF 655.84736
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.1676
ZAR 19.439595
ZMK 9224.150095
ZMW 28.059309
ZWL 329.975099
  • CMSD

    0.1390

    23.249

    +0.6%

  • RIO

    0.4520

    59.972

    +0.75%

  • RELX

    -0.1000

    45.8

    -0.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0380

    22.838

    +0.17%

  • RBGPF

    -2.5500

    59.45

    -4.29%

  • NGG

    -0.5200

    55.91

    -0.93%

  • GSK

    -0.5850

    32.115

    -1.82%

  • BTI

    0.0000

    35.35

    0%

  • SCS

    0.1100

    11.24

    +0.98%

  • AZN

    -1.0150

    64.715

    -1.57%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    8.22

    +0.24%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.01

    -0.25%

  • BCC

    1.1300

    121.64

    +0.93%

  • BCE

    -0.7490

    22.461

    -3.33%

  • BP

    -0.4550

    30.765

    -1.48%

  • RYCEF

    0.0600

    6.94

    +0.86%

'Afraid to live here': urban Bolivia's death-defying homes
'Afraid to live here': urban Bolivia's death-defying homes / Photo: JORGE BERNAL - AFP

'Afraid to live here': urban Bolivia's death-defying homes

Bolivian shopkeeper Cristobal Quispe's humble brick home teeters precariously on the slope of an unstable hillside in La Paz, near the edge of a collapsed road.

Text size:

The landscape around him is littered with the debris left behind after hundreds of structures were swept away by a mudslide in 2011, including his former house.

Quispe, 74, built a new home not far from where his original had stood.

The abode looks out on half of a park where children used to play. The other half disappeared as the landscape it was built on shifted.

Every year now during the rainy season from November to March, Quispe watches the skies over the world's highest city with trepidation.

"We are afraid to live here. When it rains... there can be a mudslide," Quispe told AFP of life in the Valle de las Flores neighborhood, whose impoverished residents mainly belong to the Aymara Indigenous group.

Despite the municipality declaring the area a perilous "red zone," Quispe and others say they have no choice but to stay there.

Most have lived there all their lives, and many have received title rights from authorities to the land they occupy -- land they hope will be valuable one day.

- 'Highly vulnerable' -

Nestled between the mountains at an altitude of more than 11,500 feet (3,500 meters), La Paz is crisscrossed by more than 300 rivers and streams, making the soil unstable.

Nearly one in five registered properties are in areas of "high" or "very high" risk, according to the municipality, many of them in shanty towns.

Since last November, the government says 16 Bolivians have died in landslides and floods caused by heavy rains.

The problem is not unique to Bolivia, say experts, who blame poor urban planning and a lack of investment in resilience to natural disasters.

"Latin America is highly vulnerable compared to other regions of the world" with "very vulnerable ecosystems," urban development specialist Ramiro Rojas of Bolivia's Univalle private university told AFP.

This, in turn, is "amplified by socioeconomic vulnerability, that is, inequalities and high rates of poverty" that force people to live in unsafe areas.

In the last ten years, at least 13,878 people died in natural disasters in Latin America and the Caribbean, according to data from the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium.

Urban planner Fernando Viviescas of the National University of Colombia told AFP the threats posed by worsening natural disasters caused by climate change were not taken into account when Latin America's cities were constructed.

Nearly 83 percent of Latin Americans now live in cities, according to the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).

- Nowhere to go -

Some 10 minutes by foot from the Valley of the Flowers, on a rocky hill, Cristina Quispe -- no relation to Cristobal -- sells groceries from her home.

Several of the 48-year-old's neighbors recently had to leave as a deluge of mud swallowed up their homes. Like hers, Quispe's neighbor's house was left standing, but now leans at a precarious angle.

"I'm not afraid. I'm calm. Anyway, it's not like I have somewhere else to go," Quispe told AFP.

Elsewhere in La Paz, in a settlement on the banks of the Irpavi river, mechanic Lucas Morales, 62, said he recently lost part of his property to flooding.

"As you can see, one day everything is fine, the next it's destroyed," he said, gesturing around him.

"That's the thing. They gave us the green light to build, but then the river flows through here."

According to Stephanie Weiss, an environmental engineer with the Bolivian Institute of Urbanism, La Paz faces a massive deficit of affordable, safe housing.

And a drive to give ownership of land to disadvantaged people who had long occupied it illegally, has had an unintended consequence of keeping them in unsafe places, she said.

Owning property is viewed as a way for poor people to save for the future, explained Weiss, and many cling to the idea of having their "own home, even if it is on the edge of a cliff."

(A.Berg--BBZ)