Medellin razes Pablo Escobar’s home in symbol of rebirth

Once the murder capital of the world, Medellin, like much of Colombia, has seen major improvements in security over the past 15 years, although the murder rate has been inching up since its all-time low in 2015

The building being crashed

Medellin: A six-floor apartment building, Monaco, in Medellin that Pablo Escobar once called home was demolished Friday in an emotional ceremony that officials hope will dampen some of the fervour for the notorious drug lord’s criminal life and instead showcase the city’s rebirth.

Rogelio Gomez, the engineer in charge of the demolition, said that 180 detonators were used to topple the Monaco building and a 100 meter security zone was designated around the area.

The explosion took place at 11:53 local time and sent a cloud of dust 10 meters (33 feet) into the air.

The famous mughshot of the drug-lord

Colombian President Ivan Duque, who was still a teenager when Escobar was killed in 1993 in a rooftop shootout with police, said the explosion “means that history is not going to be written in terms of the perpetrators but by recognising the victims.”

The white concrete building in Medellin’s leafy Poblado neighbourhood was gutted by a car bomb in 1988 and has remained an unoccupied eyesore ever since, drawing mostly foreign tourists who sign up every day for tours of Escobar’s former hometown haunts.

But Mayor Federico Gutierrez had been pushing to raze the building and erect in its place a park honouring the thousands of victims, including four presidential candidates and some 500 police officers, killed by Escobar’s army of assassins during the Medellin cartel’s heyday in the 1980s and 1990s.

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