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Abandoning El Pilar Due To Security Concerns
Wed, October 1, 2014

And while Caracol's security has been into sharp focus after the lawman's slaying, the Tour Guides from Cayo say that this Mayan site isn't the only one under constant siege by Guatemalan Bandits.

As we showed you last night, the Cayo Tour Guides Association is concerned that because EL Pilar National Park has been getting institutional neglect for years, they will soon have to abandon it completely.

They took use into the Mayan Archeological Site yesterday evening, and Daniel Ortiz has that story:

The El Pilar Archeological Site, It's a Maya Ruin just about 11 miles outside of San Ignacio Town. The problem is that this Temple Site sits both in Belizean and Guatemalan Territory.You can climb on top of one of the ancient ruins, look out in the distance, and see Guatemala.

The site sits on the Belize/Guatemala Border, and so, it is exposed to Guatemalan activity, especially armed bandits.Tour guides want to bring their international guests, but with danger lurking right across the border some 25 minutes away, they're slowly giving up on El Pilar as a viable destination.

Patrick Bradley - Cayo Tour Guide

"We are in one of the main temple in El Pilar, the site that have Belize right here. Right beyond the site across the building is Guatemala and we have the same situation when we come to do a tour in Belize without any security, without any kind of access without any help in the area. We are always on our won with the tourists and Guatemala is next door and at any time poachers could come in and have a way with us."

Jorge De Leon - Cayo Tour Guide

"Most tour operators over the past 5 years approximately have removed El Pilar from their packages."

Joe Awe - President, Cayo Tour Guide Association

"We have conceded El Pilar to the banditos, nobody goes to El Pilar because we are very scared of going to El Pilar."

Jorge De Leon

"When we come here we run the risk of being robbed. This year there's a gentleman that has a little farm not far from the site, his place was robbed. They workers, the cooks were all tied up. They had solar panels, they destroyed all that and when tourists come over here we also run the risk of being robbed. There's fellow guides, year and a half ago approximately that he was robbed, he lost is binoculars, he lost money, all the jewellery, all the cameras that the tourists had, all of that was taken from them."

That's unfortunate because the El Pilar is visually stunning and culturally rich. It has the ambience of a location which has many secrets left to be discovered, which is part of the package offered to tourists who've had the opportunity to visit:

Jorge De Leon

"When you come to a site like this you want to see building that are partly developed and here you can see where the roots and the trees are wrapping and holding everything together. This is a part of the experience the tourists want to see, they want to come to a site and experience that India Jones type of experience, you want to come to place and you want to feel like you're the first one there and this is what El Pilar offers you. It gives you from astronomy to palace complexes and then it gives you that adrenaline rush of being so close to the border thinking that something might happen. But you're wishing nothing happens and that's what we need to secure. Give these people that experience but make it safe for them. People are looking for that rush but we need to give them that rush without being endangered."

There are signs that the site has been looted – as evidenced by this trench.

Patrick Bradley

"That's a looter's trench, the looters come in and dig up the site and find what ever artefact they can find and take out anything from Belize without nobody knowing what they have. They can take maybe the best of the site would have, jewellery and jades and so forth. Nobody has access to it, but the people who come from Guatemala loot the place and mess up the site and destroy our temples in Belize."

Daniel Ortiz

"How do we know that it's Guatemalans? Can't it also be Belizeans that are doing this?"

Patrick Bradley

"Belizeans, have much to do on their little farm. The time that they have to come here and dig, they have to have food and time to waste. The little that they have, they try to make it on their little farm and get things going. People from over yonder have it worse than us, so they will take the time out to come in here because what they get from here, could be so much for them over yonder."

This entrance was also created by looters, who did not realise that they were venturing into an Ancient Mayan Palace room.

The archaeologists who excavated the site did their best to preserve its structural integrity.

And that's all part of the design of El Pilar, partial excavation to allow the natural protection of the overgrown forest to shield the Mayan site from the elements.

The protection that the tour guides are asking for is against the human elements, looters, border bandits and anyone venturing in the park for illegal activities.

But, currently, there are only 4 Park Rangers from NICH who stay and maintain the park. The rangers stick around in pairs and take 2 week shifts. They certainly aren't even as armed as the Tourism Police Unit's officers.

Longino Salam - Park Ranger, El Pilar

"Last year we did have immigrants coming here harvesting Chaya, that's the main thing that they do here, apart from illegal logging."

Jorge De Leon

"Coming to a site with security, that's not the way to secure the site. Because that just puts the tourists and puts the guide at risk because if i'm coming in a vehicle and my security, the police, is with me and if somebody wants to rob us, and they jump out of the woods with guns and if they see somebody with a gun, they're going to shoot. So I think the best thing to do is secure the site, so that when people come here, it's safe. So that is one of the things we're asking and I think part of us bring you guys here is just to show you the reality of what is going on in Belize. Our authorities need to focus on securing the sites, adequate security and training the rangers as well as the tourism police and people who are going to be here. As tour guides, we're the ones selling the site. When some comes and we bring them here, these people will go back and they will talk about this place, then they will send more people. But when it's not safe, not secure, the first that will happen is, hey Belize is beautiful but I will not take that risk to go there."

Longino Salam

"The difficulty out here is that we are by ourselves, that's a high risk for us. We don't have patrols coming in daily, they military do links up here twice a month. We are close to this border, like 25 minutes from the border."

A bit of history - El Pilar sits on the Belize/Guatemalan border. Including more than 25 plazas and covering approximately 120 acres. Dr. Anabel Ford from the University of California has been leading conservation efforts. El Pilar is also under a bi-national Management plan between Belize and Guatemala.

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