Miracle in the Amazon: 13-Year-Old’s Incredible 40-Day Survival and Her Mother’s Heartbreaking Final Words After Devastating Plane Crash

Teen tells new Netflix doc The Lost Children how she killed snakes and ate raw fish while protecting her siblings

HEARING her mother’s cries fade from beneath the plane wreckage, 13-year-old Lesly Jacobombaire Mucutuy knew it was now down to her to keep her younger siblings alive.

Earlier that morning, on May 1 2023, Lesly and her family had boarded a small plane from the southern Amazon town of Araracuara, Colombia.

The horror crash site in the Amazon rainforest
11

The horror crash site in the Amazon rainforestCredit: AFP

An Indigenous group found the children after 40 days
11

An Indigenous group found the children after 40 daysCredit: AFP

The children's miracle survival is being retold in the Netflix documentary The Lost Children
11

The children’s miracle survival is being retold in the Netflix documentary The Lost ChildrenCredit: AFP
It was hoped the flight, heading north to the country’s Guaviare region, would lead Lesly’s family to safety.

They were fleeing their Amazon hamlet because there were narco crime groups close by.

They had threatened Magdalena’s husband Manuel Ranoque, an indigenous leader with a dubious reputation.

Yet the turn of events that were about to unfold led them into even more danger and heartbreaking tragedy.

Alongside Lesly on the small Cessna aircraft was her mother Magdalena Mucutuy, nine-year-old sister Soleiny, 11-month-old sister Cristin and four-year-old brother Tien.

About half an hour into the flight, as the small blue and white plane soared over one of the wettest, densest and remotest areas of the Amazon, its engine failed.

There was a mayday alert to air traffic control. Not long after, radio contact was lost.

When news of a crash hit the news in Colombia, everyone wanted to know whether the children and their mother had survived it.

The family’s fate would soon become a national obsession.

Lesly’s account of what happened, which formed part of Colombia’s official investigation, is retold in a new Netflix documentary, The Lost Children, via a translator.

Youngest woman to climb all 14 of the world’s 8,000-metre-plus peaks
“After the accident, I don’t know how long I was unconscious for,” Lesly says.

“When I woke up there was a lot of blood and I had a large cut on my left side, which was very painful.

“I could hear my siblings crying and crying. My mother was making noises and she stopped. Maybe if I had woken up earlier, I could have saved her.”

Magdalena’s grieving sister, Yeritza Mucutuy, tells documentary-makers: “I cried so much when I heard the news about my sister, Magdalena, and her children. They were like my children.

“She [Magadalena] was always so cheerful. It was like she didn’t even know what sadness was. She was more like a mother to me. We were very close.”

More than 150 soldiers with dogs were dispatched
11

More than 150 soldiers with dogs were dispatchedCredit: AFP

A baby's bottle near the crash site gave rescuers hope
11

A baby’s bottle near the crash site gave rescuers hopeCredit: AFP
Colombian Special Forces were deployed to the region the Cessna had last been traced to.

Members of the indigenous Huitoto group, more used to the jungle than the military, started their own search.

They combed the forest alongside Magdalena’s husband Manuel Ranoque – biological father to her two youngest children.

The inhospitable jungle terrain was almost impossible to navigate. The rain pelted down 16 hours a day.

There were no roads and the meandering rivers teemed with predators, including piranhas and anacondas.

I got all the strength I had when I dragged myself on my knees. I did that for the first 20 days. We were lost. I knew that I just had to keep going

Lesly Jacobombaire Mucutuy

The documentary retraces the mammoth search effort, using real-time footage from Amazon search teams and interviews with key members.

The hunt was made even more perilous because of the risk searchers would come face-to-face with geurilla fighters, terrorists operating in the area and financed by drug trafficking operations.

Sign of life

Sixteen days into their search, some of the Huitoto finally had a breakthrough.

They found the mangled Cessna plane, clinging vertically to the thick jungle undergrowth. Plane debris was strewn across the jungle floor.

When Special Forces were drafted in to identify the bodies they confirmed mother Magdalena, 33, was dead, alongside the pilot and another male passenger.

Yet it soon became clear that the children had miraculously escaped.

Special Forces Captain “Legionario”, tasked with retrieving the bodies, explains: “All of a sudden my sergeant said to me, ‘Captain, I’ve found a baby’s bottle.’

The Amazon is a treacherous place - let alone with there also being terrorists, drug traffickers and guerilla fighters to deal with
11

The Amazon is a treacherous place – let alone with there also being terrorists, drug traffickers and guerilla fighters to deal withCredit: Netflix

More than 10,000 flyers were dropped over the forest in the hope the children would find one
11

More than 10,000 flyers were dropped over the forest in the hope the children would find oneCredit: Netflix
“A bottle in the jungle? Unbelievable. I was shocked. After that, we came across some wild fruit, passionfruit. It had human bite marks on it. As we continued on, we found a refuge [hiding place].”

Searchers also found footprints and, later, even a soiled nappy.

The children appeared to be alive but for how long and where were they now?

‘Could barely walk’

As Lesly explains in her account of events, she kicked into survival mode after the crash.

She says: “I pulled my sister out from underneath my mother and I know we couldn’t stay and we had to abandon the plane so we could find more food and find something to drink.”

The country was gripped by news the children had survived.

Now the search took on a new lease of life, with everyone focused on finding them.

I got up and decided to leave my sisters and my brother by themselves. I started to walk away to be on my own but after 20 minutes I realised I had to go back

Lesly

The rescue mission was dubbed “Operation Hope”. The Colombian armed forces flew 150 soldiers with dogs to the area to search for the siblings.

It seemed almost inconceivable that a baby and three children could survive the elements.

Lesly soldiered on.

She says: “My leg was hurting so much and I could hardly even stand and walk at all.

“I got all the strength I had when I dragged myself on my knees.

“I did that for the first 20 days. We were lost. I knew that I just had to keep going.

“My biggest worry the whole time was keeping baby Cristin alive. I had to take care of her. I knew that she needed more food than we did.”

One of the kids sketches how Lesly fished to keep them alive
11

One of the kids sketches how Lesly fished to keep them aliveCredit: Netflix

The teen miraculously kept her pre-teen siblings alive
11

The teen miraculously kept her pre-teen siblings aliveCredit: Netflix
It was skills that Lesly had learned growing up in her Indigenous community that was key to keeping them alive.

“My mother had taught me about fruits we could eat in the jungle,” she says.

“I made a fishing rod out of what I could find. With the rod, we were able to catch some fish. We ate the fish raw. It tasted horrible.”

Race against time

Special Forces blasted a phone recording from their grandmother out over megaphones from military helicopters.

The message was simple: “Children please, if you can hear this announcement stay where you are.”

They dispatched more than 10,000 flyers that read: “Stay close to the water. Don’t move.”

“We were trying to follow the voice that we heard but it would fade,” Lesly says. “I would try to get my sisters and brother to sleep each night.

They looked scared as if they wanted to run away from us so I raised my arms… and said ‘family’

Nicolas Ordonez, volunteer rescuer

“I didn’t really sleep. One night in the jungle we almost sat on a snake. I was able to kill it with a stick.

“My brother became so weak that he could no longer stand on his own anymore. One day I dreamt that they would never find us.

“My heart was beating fast and I struggled so hard to breathe.

“I got up and decided to leave my sisters and my brother by themselves. I started to walk away to be on my own but after 20 minutes I realised I had to go back.

“I had to protect my brother and my sisters. Cristin and Tien were both very close to dying.”

Emaciated but breathing

One of the children being treated by rescuers
11

One of the children being treated by rescuersCredit: Reuters

Lesly and her siblings were lucky to have survived
11

Lesly and her siblings were lucky to have survivedCredit: AFP
Several weeks into the rescue the military called off the search.

The search area had narrowed but so had the hopes the children had survived.

The indigenous volunteers prepared rituals and prayed for some divine intervention.

Finally, those prayers were answered – 40 days in, a small group of indigenous volunteers, finally found the children.

Traipsing through the unforgiving terrain, volunteer Nicolas Ordonez, was the first to greet them.

He says: “I lifted up my head to see where the companions were and then I saw the kids.

“They looked scared as if they wanted to run away from us so I raised my arms… and said ‘family’.”

Close to death, the children were a shell of their former selves. They were barely able to move, emaciated… but they were still breathing.

Lesly says: “When I saw the man, I collapsed. I felt very good. I no longer had to keep my brother and sisters alive. They were now safe.”

The children were air-lifted to safety.

Yet, for some, it also brought the indigenous people and military closer – two parties who for decades had fought one another – together for the greater good.

For many, like Nicolas, the rescue had a profound effect on them.

 

Related Posts

Our Privacy policy

https://hotnewstodayus.com - © 2024 News