People -
6 Jun 2018 14:00

Nearly four decades have passed since that afternoon Tracy Parks knelt on the rain-soaked, muddy airstrip in Guyana, cradling her mother's lifeless body in her hands, shaking her in a desperate attempt to wake her up. But for Parks, it feels like it happened just yesterday. The explosion of gunfire had stopped, but all around her lay bullet-ridden bodies -- some dead, others bleeding and moaning. "Get in the jungle," her father Jerry screamed. "Run." Tracy, then 12, looked up to see her older si...
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