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

USD -
AED 3.67315
AFN 62.508602
ALL 82.901415
AMD 377.320103
ANG 1.790083
AOA 917.000446
ARS 1397.45603
AUD 1.43901
AWG 1.80225
AZN 1.700706
BAM 1.687977
BBD 2.01456
BDT 122.73608
BGN 1.709309
BHD 0.377588
BIF 2967.5
BMD 1
BND 1.279846
BOB 6.926967
BRL 5.284006
BSD 1.000203
BTN 93.723217
BWP 13.705842
BYN 2.961192
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011712
CAD 1.378275
CDF 2277.500338
CHF 0.791905
CLF 0.023254
CLP 918.179579
CNY 6.892698
CNH 6.90259
COP 3705.94
CRC 466.057627
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 95.375002
CZK 21.140432
DJF 177.720285
DKK 6.458295
DOP 59.874991
DZD 132.744974
EGP 52.575297
ERN 15
ETB 157.374952
EUR 0.864097
FJD 2.2267
FKP 0.74705
GBP 0.748095
GEL 2.714977
GGP 0.74705
GHS 10.905012
GIP 0.74705
GMD 73.000221
GNF 8780.00019
GTQ 7.659677
GYD 209.341164
HKD 7.82618
HNL 26.519884
HRK 6.514398
HTG 131.152069
HUF 338.600498
IDR 16919
ILS 3.12535
IMP 0.74705
INR 94.12285
IQD 1310
IRR 1315049.999853
ISK 124.289869
JEP 0.74705
JMD 157.845451
JOD 0.708962
JPY 159.145006
KES 129.505219
KGS 87.448496
KHR 4015.000082
KMF 425.000187
KPW 899.971148
KRW 1501.980286
KWD 0.30663
KYD 0.833571
KZT 482.866057
LAK 21550.000246
LBP 89549.999464
LKR 314.407654
LRD 183.602089
LSL 16.849649
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.395021
MAD 9.361979
MDL 17.4948
MGA 4164.999916
MKD 53.274154
MMK 2099.628947
MNT 3568.971376
MOP 8.061125
MRU 40.110041
MUR 49.241272
MVR 15.450211
MWK 1736.999739
MXN 17.821301
MYR 3.956501
MZN 63.899281
NAD 16.820108
NGN 1379.906022
NIO 36.720467
NOK 9.72285
NPR 149.95361
NZD 1.723707
OMR 0.384506
PAB 1.000203
PEN 3.473017
PGK 4.305501
PHP 60.074007
PKR 279.249903
PLN 3.69763
PYG 6526.476592
QAR 3.643996
RON 4.402503
RSD 101.500987
RUB 80.49933
RWF 1460
SAR 3.753711
SBD 8.051718
SCR 14.408321
SDG 600.99945
SEK 9.363065
SGD 1.280945
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.550032
SLL 20969.510825
SOS 571.500489
SRD 37.340116
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.63
SVC 8.752314
SYP 110.977546
SZL 16.849782
THB 32.743003
TJS 9.597587
TMT 3.5
TND 2.904952
TOP 2.40776
TRY 44.34383
TTD 6.795811
TWD 31.96405
TZS 2569.999672
UAH 43.928935
UGX 3745.690083
UYU 40.762429
UZS 12205.000254
VES 456.504355
VND 26357
VUV 119.458227
WST 2.748874
XAF 566.134155
XAG 0.014408
XAU 0.000228
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802694
XDR 0.704159
XOF 568.499098
XPF 103.401522
YER 238.649518
ZAR 17.08035
ZMK 9001.198055
ZMW 18.929544
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.87

    -0.04%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    82.33

    +0.33%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4500

    15.6

    -2.88%

  • AZN

    1.7100

    185.78

    +0.92%

  • GSK

    0.9600

    52.95

    +1.81%

  • BCE

    0.0700

    25.83

    +0.27%

  • BP

    1.2200

    44.79

    +2.72%

  • RIO

    0.9300

    86.77

    +1.07%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    57.76

    -0.28%

  • BCC

    1.6900

    73.57

    +2.3%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.63

    -0.49%

  • RELX

    -1.3500

    32.46

    -4.16%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    11.86

    +1.52%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    14.66

    +1.23%

'Afraid to live here': urban Bolivia's death-defying homes
'Afraid to live here': urban Bolivia's death-defying homes / Photo: © 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."

C.Fong--ThChM