Disir
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- Sep 30, 2011
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Talk of the devil and he is bound to appear, the saying goes. In Ecuador, that means even during the pandemic.
An Andean village festival known as the Diablada, or dance of the devils, was muted Wednesday because of the health emergency. But a small group of people in demon and other costumes still danced without spectators, obeying municipal rules that no more than 30 people participate as Ecuador struggles to contain the spread of the coronavirus.
oanow.com
That looks like an interesting festival.
An Andean village festival known as the Diablada, or dance of the devils, was muted Wednesday because of the health emergency. But a small group of people in demon and other costumes still danced without spectators, obeying municipal rules that no more than 30 people participate as Ecuador struggles to contain the spread of the coronavirus.
![oanow.com](https://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/oanow.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/a/b7/ab7ed355-3014-5461-bb0c-76c11171a2d9/5ff66481a33f0.image.jpg?crop=1904%2C1071%2C0%2C8&resize=1120%2C630&order=crop%2Cresize)
Devils dance, observe virus protocols at Ecuador festival
PILLARO, Ecuador (AP) — Talk of the devil and he is bound to appear, the saying goes. In Ecuador, that means even during the pandemic.
That looks like an interesting festival.