Nuevamente se reportan incidentes en el furgón del tren San Martín, donde vendedores de plantas y pasajeros protagonizan peleas tras el consumo de marihuana. A pesar de operativos anteriores para evitar estas situaciones, la violencia persiste, generando preocupación entre los usuarios. El último incidente viral ocurrió cerca de la estación José C. Paz, evidenciando una problemática recurrente que afecta a los trabajadores que utilizan este medio de transporte diariamente.
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00:00They wanted to invite someone with a bottle of Fasito, a marihuana.
00:05Drugs again in the van of San Martin.
00:08In this case, plant sellers.
00:11You saw that they sell flowers, plants, on board the San Martin train.
00:16They insist that you buy them.
00:18Well, after the sales, frustrated in many cases,
00:22because it is not very clear what they are selling,
00:25they smoke a Faso, as they say,
00:28and these fights begin because they did not want to invite him.
00:31Again, the whining of the people in the van.
00:34Again, the violence.
00:35Nobody does anything, they are all dancing.
00:37Look, there is a referee.
00:38There is a referee who stands up to rest.
00:41Again, the same scene.
00:42Guille takes off his shirt, one of the opponents.
00:47This happens on the way home.
00:49The bicycles are hanging.
00:50The bicycles are hanging.
00:51Look, you can also see a backpack of a delivery worker.
00:56It is the moment of fun for many, obviously,
01:00in the situation of extreme violence that is being seen on the trains.
01:05Fortunately, there is still no victim, Guille.
01:08But I don't know how long it will take for it to end in a lethal way,
01:11when someone pulls out a gun, when someone pulls out a knife.
01:15This is being seen every day on the train.
01:17This is the last one that went viral in recent hours.
01:20It happened in the vicinity, they tell me, of the José C. Paz station.
01:23They had made some kind of operation on Argentine trains at the time
01:27to avoid the consumption of drugs and alcohol in the train van.
01:31They can't, obviously, do it all day long.
01:34And these things happen.
01:36Another act of violence.
01:37Another fight.
01:38Another dengue.
01:39It's a ring, the van.
01:41That's what happens at the end of the day, Germán.
01:43They turn around.
01:45From four o'clock...
01:46I am a user of the San Martín train, I see it.
01:48From four o'clock you start to see that many of the...
01:51Have you ever been to one of these?
01:53This fight?
01:54Yes.
01:55Really?
01:56It happens a lot.
01:58Wait, and what do you do?
01:59Inside the same train.
02:00Do you recognize yourself?
02:01Do you have to stay quiet?
02:02No, I don't recognize myself, luckily.
02:03No, well, no.
02:04I don't recognize myself.
02:05Listen to me.
02:06What do you do?
02:07As a spectator, you have nothing to do with it.
02:08You get angry because they didn't give you marijuana.
02:11People get off and wait for the other line.
02:14There is already a burden.
02:16No, it's not a burden of the word, let's say.
02:18People are already...
02:19Natural.
02:20They naturalize it, but they forget that it takes time.
02:22Because I don't get on this savage.
02:24You know what happens?
02:25I get off, I go to the other one and it takes half an hour.
02:27Wait, if this happens to you at a station that has a central line,
02:30it happens that the service is not interrupted.
02:33If you don't have interruptions from 15 to 20 minutes,
02:35up to half an hour for fights, it's a continuous issue.
02:38As I was saying, four, five in the afternoon you start to see many workers.
02:42Because most of those who use this train are workers.
02:45Which is the last wagon, generally.
02:47You have two wagons.
02:49At the front end...
02:51Actually, the train has a locomotive
02:54that, depending on the head, changes
02:56and sometimes the wagon is in front or sometimes the wagon is behind.
03:00If you already go in the first wagon,
03:02which is half a wagon,
03:04you already have the smell of marijuana all day.
03:06That's a reality.
03:07Now, from 4 or 5 in the afternoon,
03:09they start to increase the consumption of alcoholic beverages.
03:12Nobody avoids it.
03:13Nobody avoids it because the Federal Police
03:15is very limited in the sense of avoiding violent situations
03:18like the one we remember.
03:20Do you only fight or do they take advantage of the tumult? Robberies?
03:23Robberies. There are continuous robberies.
03:25What happens is that there is a citizen security,
03:27of social justice,
03:29that when people see that this happens,
03:31they go in hordes and grab them.
03:33That's why, for now...
03:34Because those who travel by train are usually workers.
03:37Of course.
03:38Well, but these guys are also fighting
03:40because they sell you plants,
03:42they sell you friends, guys,
03:44and they come and offer you a plant, a flower, I don't know.
03:46But they end up in these situations
03:48because of the excessive consumption of drugs,
03:50the excessive consumption of alcohol that occurs inside the train.
03:52Yes.
03:53It generates this situation of delays,
03:55of the intervention of the police,
03:57but the escalation that is being seen of violence
03:59in so many days in the San Martín train,
04:02in the Sarmiento as well,
04:04will undoubtedly lead to a tragic situation.
04:06That's obvious.
04:07Okay, but let's study the subject.
04:09There is this feeling,
04:10like you said, Alvaro,
04:11there must be bets here, you know?
04:13Because at one point the other one is planted,
04:15the one that is not in leather.
04:17A pot has...
04:18Of course.
04:19It's like he says, well, now yes,
04:21and nothing.
04:23It starts with a drought,
04:24at least that's what the passengers say.
04:26Because what you also have is a lot of lack of police information.
04:30Because what happens here?
04:31The police intervene,
04:32they stop and let them go.
04:34They don't make an information break,
04:35no prosecutor intervenes,
04:36because it is naturalized,
04:38it happens every day,
04:39and it happens four, five, six times.
04:41There are no victims.
04:42They end up in a fight with some injured.
04:44This time it seems to be like a kind of referee,
04:46what you marked Guillermo.
04:47There is like an internal code.
04:48Of course.
04:49It's a code, it's a jail.
04:51It's a jail.
04:52It's a jail.
04:53It's all very tumble, right?
04:54It's very tumble,
04:55what happens inside a jail.
04:57Obviously the delay in service,
04:58which is what makes it difficult,
04:59what harms all the workers
05:01who take the San Martín train in this case.
05:03But hey, the degree of violence
05:05and the naturalness they have at the time of fighting.
05:08I, if I get hit like that,
05:09I get shocked another day.
05:11And he has a boxer's movement.
05:12Notice that in which he is in leather,
05:13he looks like El Oche,
05:14who is dodging the blows.
05:15It's part of the day,
05:16it's part of the day of life.
05:18And yes, yes,
05:19the harem continues from the rest,
05:21celebrating that they don't need to get home
05:24to watch a boxing match on television,
05:26they are watching it directly on the train,
05:27live and live.
05:28They don't bet,
05:29at least what we know.
05:31But again,
05:32and surely soon we will have more images.
05:34Yes, yes,
05:35this is naturalized.
05:36Well,
05:37unfortunate.
05:38One more,
05:39especially for the people who have nothing to do
05:41and meet these gangs,
05:42who start fighting there on the train.