Arriving in Buenos
Aires, I normally recalibrate my instincts to adapt to the Argentine
capital’s motorists, who never even seem to see anybody in the crosswalk. I have
long written that, as a pedestrian here, the first rule of survival is to
appreciate that you are invisible. Making eye contact with a Porteño driver is next to
impossible.
Others, though, think even less of those drivers than I do.
Last month, at the Feria Internacional de
Turismo, a US consular employee told me that he thought pedestrians were
not invisible – rather, they were targets. I disagree on that – the fact is
that most Porteño drivers look carefully at intersections to avoid other
vehicles, but utterly ignore pedestrians. On those occasions when pedestrians
do register, few drivers stop; rather, they swerve around them, often while
cursing out the window. Once, two doors from our apartment, a policeman told me
that issuing citations to drivers who fail to yield to pedestrians in a
crosswalk was “not my job.”
Having established that, I can say that I’ve noticed
improvements, and some Porteño friends agree with me that respect for
pedestrians is growing. Etiquette may still be a minority position among Buenos
Aires drivers, but some of them are learning. Credit where credit is due.
On a peripherally related matter, though, there’s been
regression. In our Palermo neighborhood, in particular, motorists have begun to
occupy crosswalks as their own personal parking places, forcing pedestrians out
into the street where they’re even more vulnerable to speeding drivers. Only a
couple days after my arrival, as I walked toward the nearby Parque
3 de Febrero, I found several cars blocking the crosswalk on the broad and
busy Avenida Libertador, with a policeman standing idly nearby.
Approaching him, I asked whether or not blocking the
crosswalk (including a handicapped ramp) was an infraction, and he replied that indeed it was. Then I asked
him why he hadn’t written out a ticket and, in contrast to the cop who said
moving violations were not his job, he pulled out his book and started to cite
the vehicles in question (as pictured above). This was positive, of course, except perhaps for the
fact that he had to wait for someone to ask him to do his job.
In a similar situation a few days ago, I found another
vehicle blocking the crosswalk along Blvd. Cerviño, just steps away from our
building. Likewise, a policeman stood nearby as pedestrians maneuvered around
the vehicle (and the pile of trash that made things even worse, but that’s a
separate issue that I’ll deal with in the near future). This cop, though, was less compliant than the
other – “I don’t have a citation book,” he said, and he didn’t think it would
be fair to call the tow truck (ignoring fairness to pedestrians, of course). Argentina
may have achieved marriage equality, but equivalent respect for pedestrians has a long way to go.
Chile Travel Adventures
I won’t get back to Chile until next year, but that doesn’t
mean I won’t be paying attention to the stringbean land across the Andes.
Last year, in partnership with Sutro Media,
I published my first iPhone
app Argentina Travel Adventures, which recently
came out in an Android version as well. More recently – just a week or so
ago, in fact – Chile
Travel Adventures has gone live to complement Argentina in both iPhone and
in Android format, so that readers can explore southernmost South America
on their mobiles as well as in print. At just US$2.99 each, the apps are,
figuratively if not literally, a giveaway, with regular updates at no
additional charge.
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