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The Documentary Podcast

Guatemala – After the Fire

The Documentary Podcast

BBC

Society & Culture, Documentary, Personal Journals

4.32.6K Ratings

🗓️ 14 June 2018

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On 8th March, 2017 a fire engulfed part of the Virgen de la Asuncion children’s home on the outskirts of Guatemala City. 41 teenaged girls died. A further 15 were seriously injured, and are still recovering from burns. The President of Guatemala, Jimmy Morales, declared 3 days of national mourning. But the story that soon emerged revealed a child protection crisis of epic proportions.

Virgen de la Asuncion was supposed to be a refuge for children affected by abuse, neglect or who had become entangled in Guatemala’s gang culture. Often girls were placed in the home for their own protection, to keep them from the clutches of traffickers and drug dealers who operate with impunity in poor neighbourhoods. But conditions at the home were appalling. Designed for 400, it was home to hundreds more boys and girls. And far from being a sanctuary for the children, there was a terrifying culture of abuse – sexual and physical. On 7th March, 2017 more than 100 of the children and young people broke out. Most were rounded up in the local area by the police. As punishment, they were locked up. And in protest, in the room where the girls were corralled, one of them set fire to a mattress.

Assignment meets families, explores the fate of others who lived at the home, and talks to welfare workers. Why did no one heed the loud warning bells about Virgen de la Asuncion?

Presenter Linda Pressly Producer Georgina Hewes

Photo title: Heidi Hernandez – her daughter survived the fire with life-changing injuries / Credit: Georgina Hewes BBC

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I have a lot of memories traveling this room.

0:05.0

I'm trying to make sure me

0:10.0

it's part of my life. I have a lot of memories traveling this road.

0:15.0

It's part of my life.

0:18.0

It's difficult.

0:20.0

Well, Suyapamillion spent more than a year living here. We're just approaching.

0:26.0

Very high green walls, topped with barbed wire.

0:32.0

Looks like a prison.

0:33.0

Doesn't look like a children's home.

0:35.0

And how do you feel being back here?

0:38.0

I have a lot of mixed emotions.

0:42.0

Sadness. I have a lot of mixed emotions, sadness, affliction, anger.

0:47.0

Okay.

0:48.0

What about her now?

0:50.0

Okay.

0:51.0

A half hour's drive from Guatemala City into the countryside. We've arrived at the now deserted

0:59.2

Virgin de la Sunezion children's home. I'm Linda Presley and in this week's assignment we'll revisit the story of what happened here in March last year,

1:08.0

why the home was closed, and explore the crisis in child protection in this small Central American nation.

1:15.0

One of the punishments at the home was physical,

1:20.0

so they would take us at midnight and make us run until we vomited until we were nearly unconscious.

1:27.0

At midnight? Yes at midnight.

1:31.0

And they would throw cold water over us while we ran. Another punishment was

...

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