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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, October 08, 2000 |
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Untouched by time
CARTAGENA sits at the northwestern tip of Colombia like an old
jewel that has lost its shine. A maritime stronghold of Spain's
overseas empire, its reputation as the best preserved of Spanish
colonial destinations has been diminishing in value as a tourist
attraction. For all its offerings, including an enchanting beach,
a walled old city and a bewildering array of torture equipment
that are a grim reminder of the colonial past and all the
feverish spending in the last decade that saw the construction of
facilities, it has ceased attracting tourists.
Few international flights connect it these days since the
country's record as a drug haven with its three-decade long
violent guerrilla war have driven away the few thousand tourists
who would otherwise seek it out. Drug trafficking, guerrilla
warfare, kidnappings, the images that Colombia conjures up are
certainly not a tourist's dream of an entertaining holiday.
Today, with the Government in Bogota presenting Cartagena as its
best face and promoting it as a convention centre, the city gets
a steady stream of foreign delegates come to attend international
conferences. With neither the time nor inclination to hop around
and spend their foreign currency, these visitors can bring little
succour to the ailing tourism industry, the country's sole bread
winner.
Cartagena, (pronounced Car-ta-hey-na), carries all the scars of
the economic and political turmoil of the past decade.
Nevertheless, being far removed from the guerrilla playground, it
has managed to preserve its native attractions that can instantly
transport you back in time.
With its typical Latin ambience and equally typical people, the
city bears an air of friendly unreality that must entice even an
inveterate traveller. The old world charm, if you have the time
to explore, can be intoxicating: the cathedral in the heart of
the old city, the Spanish architecture that has survived the
ravages of time and the tourist tide, the cobbled dark alleyways
that have remained untouched by modernisation, the Spanish
balconies similar to those in Lima, Peru, that have been declared
a UNESCO heritage, the show piece convention centre that sits on
the edge of the water, the carnival atmosphere that creeps in as
the day wears on, the colourful outdoor cafes and their well
cobbled plazas, the unboisterous night life, the horse drawn
coaches and paddle boats bobbing on the water as they wait for
the odd tourist. The Latin mystique in full play.
The old city, enclosed in parapet walls to keep out the invader
in the early decades of colonisation, reminds you of Old Delhi
minus the teeming, jostling crowd. There are few reminders of the
flourishing old days except dilapidated, crumbling buildings
whose occupants apparently have no means of repairing them. It
was not surprising that the only jewellery shop offering emeralds
- Colombia's precious export - was boarded up and guarded like a
fortress.
In basic detail, Cartagena is much like any steamy port town in
India with its hot climate and plentiful signs of deprivation,
the most evident of which are the tourist-savvy touts and
souvenir hawkers who can drive you to desperation with their
persistence. For an Indian, this was no great distraction. That
sunny Sunday in early April, when a group of Indians was in
Cartagena for a ministerial meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement
was no different: we had a nasty taste of the vendor menace. With
their aggressive, intrusive attempts to sell T-shirts, chains,
lockets and curios, they nearly prevented us from getting out of
our hotel on the seafront.
The biggest surprise, of course, awaited us on the beaches. The
vast stretches of sands in an old city area called Bocagrande
where most high rise tourist hotels are located had begun to get
bathers at the stroke of dawn. The waters gleaming in the absence
of big waves and the bright early morning sun added to the
mysterious glamour even as Latin life as we had not seen in the
earlier two days began to unfold itself. In a few hours, the
beaches were swarming with fun loving locals, men and women of
all ages stretched out on the sands or under tents that lined the
shore in a bewildering maze of shades and shapes.
The temperate climate ensured that you did not get burnt in the
sun or on the sands. Stone breakers, built at distances of 100
metres and jutting into the water, made it safe for children to
splash around without fear. As the day wore on, the unhurried
pace on the sands continued. There were the hawkers - and the
occasional masseurs and hairbraiders - whose numbers increased as
evening approaches and the bathers filled the sands to
overflowing. At sundown,which was quite late in the evening,
there was not the slightest hint that the bathers were inclined
to return home or that the children were tired of frolicking.
There was more than enough light - and adequate security from gun
toting soldiers and security men.
A poor man's Rio de Janeiro it was, appropriately on the wrong
side of the South American continent. If at Rio you were warned
of muggers on the prowl on the beaches and advised to carry the
minimum of clothing and cash, here in Cartagena the threat
appeared to come mainly from the swarms of vendors.
Of course, we had a foretaste of the need for caution as we
prepared to take the Colombian national airline, Avianca's direct
flight to Cartagena from Miami in the United States. A sleek
machine wrapped the checked-in luggage in plastic sheathing
apparently as a measure of abundant caution. That this was no
excessive American security obsession became clear when we
reached our destination in less than two hours: the suitcases of
one of our colleagues was missing at the baggage counter at
Cartagena, never to be traced despite the assurances of
apologetic officials. The shocking aspect was that there were
more gun-wielding security men on the bleak wind-swept tarmac at
Cartagena's airport than officials at the reception to guide us
at the unknown, unfamiliar land. It was an unpleasant
introduction to an otherwise warm and friendly city considered a
living museum of the 16th and 17th century Spanish architecture.
K.V. KRISHNASWAMY
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