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Father of Colombian children lost for a month in the Amazon jungle accused of abuse
Members of the military and Manuel Ranoque, father of the child survivors of a Cessna 206 plane that crashed in thick jungle, at a military airbase after the children were rescued in June. — Reuters pic

BOGOTA, Aug 13 — Colombian prosecutors announced sexual abuse charges yesterday against the father of two of the four Indigenous children who survived a May plane crash in the South American country’s Amazon region.

The children went missing after the small plane they were traveling in went down, killing their mother and two other adults.

In a statement, prosecutors accused Manuel Ranoque of sexually abusing his 13-year-old stepdaughter, who was widely credited with ensuring that she and her younger siblings survived the more than five-week-long ordeal in the Amazon that garnered headlines across the globe.

Ranoque, who was arrested on Friday, stands accused of abusing his stepdaughter since she was 10 years old, according to the statement.

Reuters was not able to locate Ranoque or his lawyer after hours on Saturday to request comment.

The children, aged 1 through 13, were hospitalised for over a month after they were rescued in June. Since then, have been in the care of Colombia’s family welfare institute, where prosecutors claim the alleged abuse was first suspected. — Reuters

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