A Nottingham man was caught up in a riot that broke out at one of the Seven Wonders of the World. E-Commerce Analyst, Jamie Headington, 31, captured the chaos at Machu Picchu, Peru, during his trip and felt he was left in the lurch at the gates of the site.
Police and local authorities had to close off the wonder to the hundreds of waiting tourists. Jamie said that he had his passport confiscated by authorities and would only get it back once he paid up for another ticket, despite already paying through a tour agency.
Jamie narrowly avoided the chaos and managed to get his money's worth, after he managed to get through with an invalid ticket in a mad rush. Footage shows the large crowds gathering at the gates of the sight with police officers having to barricade gates as angry tourists tried to push through.
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Many of the tourists can be seen waving their paper tickets as they pack in close together. Further clips show the madness behind the gate where he explained that "fights were breaking out" and the "police were arresting people".
Mr Headington said: "I was travelling, it was just a one-off trip to Peru, I also went to Bolivia but I've been travelling for a while, I was in Asia for the last five months. Peru was a spontaneous, last-minute trip, pretty much the reason was to see Machu Picchu.
"I was going to see the Amazon in Bolivia but it's just a bit too far on the buses. The whole trip was centred around Machu Picchu.
"In the video, it's just the crowd's reaction, a lot of people waited around for a long time, I waited from 4am at the ticket office. Even the day before I was waiting five or six hours and a lot of people were told 'there's no more tickets tonight' so all these people came back in the morning just to be told to wait."
He added: "They waited till 2pm, so they'd been waiting around eight hours, just to be told 'no more tickets today'. Nobody knew what was going on, even the police didn't know what was going on, nobody externally knew what was going on because the Ministry of Tourism and tourism agencies were having meetings.
"A lot of anger was caused, for the most part because the tour agencies essentially sold tour packages, which included tickets for Machu Picchu so these people assumed they had tickets for that day. So when the Government changed that rule there was a lot of problems, because these tour agencies are kind of s*** to be honest.
"The one I was with, I tried to call them and they just disappeared, they didn't want to deal with it. They were trying to sort stuff out behind the scenes, but they sold a package with a ticket [for Machu Picchu] and there was no ticket."
Mr Headington continued: "My specific situation, the tour agency I was with, they gave me a ticket, it was very confusing where it came from, I got to the top of the mountain and noticed the date was for the following month and I wasn't allowed in because of that. I rang the tour agency and they said I had to pay 'right now' for the invalid ticket.
"They said if you don't pay 'we're not letting you on the bus home' so they were essentially leaving me stranded. At the end of the day, the only reason that I got into Machu Picchu was that the mayor and the police were all at the top of the mountain and they decided that all the people that made it to the top, about 30 people, have tickets."
He explained that all of their passports were taken to an office downstairs at the bottom of the mountain in the town, and they had to wait. At 5pm they started letting people in, and wrote their names on a piece of paper.
Mr Headington said: "After we were done, we rushed round Machu Picchu and rushed back to the village, where we went to collect our passport and pay the money. They would only give us our passports back once we paid for the ticket itself.
"It was pretty chaotic, I didn't eat all day, and there was no communication from the tour agency, the police didn't know what was going on. I got back to Lima, I was there for a week and I was trying to sort out a refund, but because I was dealing with three different companies and no one wanted to take responsibility so I was going back and forth.
"No one wanted to take responsibility or give me an apology or a refund. Nothing at all. The whole thing was a bit of a mess to be honest."
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