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First Person: El Nino Slams Peru

CBS News Correspondent Bill Whitaker, producer Bruce Rheins, and a CBS News camera crew have just returned from Peru where they witnessed the ravages of El Nino first hand. On assignment for "The CBS Evening News", they were armed with a digital camera which they used to document the following Special to CBS.com. Their on-the-scene reports will be presented this week on the "CBS Evening News" El Nino Watch.

Map of Peru

Just getting to the little town of Santa Teresa, Peru, illustrates the nearly complete breakdown in the infrastructure that El Nino has created throughout South America.

Normally, there are roads that lead into the jungle town, as well as a relatively smooth operating train system. Now, after a massive avalanche of mud the roads are washed out and the trains aren't running normally. In fact, on the day we visited, ours was the first train in days to try out the tracks after they were covered in rocks and mud loosened by a torrential El Nino storm.

Click on picture to enlargeWe chartered a small engine to make the 18-km trip from Aguas Caliente, near Machu Picchu.

It took more than an hour, picking our way through shaky sections of track; finally, we stopped in Santa Teresa, just short of where the tracks were crumpled by the redirected raging river.Click on picture to enlarge

On the way back, our engine was frantically flagged down a few kilometers outside of Santa Teresa; more huge boulders had rolled down the mountain--and the tracks were damaged, bent so far that they could not be easily repaired. The regular passenger train from Aguas Caliente, making its first run in days, had to turn back.

Click on picture to enlargeAfter sitting in the jungle for about half-an-hour, our conductor convinced the stationmaster (via a crank-phone on a wire) that we coul shimmy through.

As we approached, one of the train engineers accompanying us got out to eyeball our wheels; I looked out and saw the tracks had bent about 20 or 25 degrees.Click on picture to enlarge

We slowed to a crawl, and the train rattled and shook like a chainsaw as we inched over the damaged section of track.

Click on picture to enlargeOur wheels stayed on, though...and we finally made it back.

Had we not returned, our little engine would not have been back to lead out the main trains from Machu Picchu back to Cuzco; hundreds of tourists would have been stranded as well. It is like that all over South America; there are few alternatives to firmly-entrenched travel operations -- and El Nino has caused a slowdown that will reverberate throughout the economy of those countries long after the warm-water pool has finally migrated away.

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