'We are still digging’: Rescuers in Venezuela as thousands still missing after quakes
The official death toll rose to 235 with at least 4,300 people injured and thousands others missing.
PTI
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People woke up to buildings reduced to skeletons, furniture hanging out of windows and helicopters the day after quake (PTI)
La Guaira, 26 June
In cities across northern Venezuela, neighbours helped each
other dig through rubble to search for loved ones on Thursday after
back-to-back earthquakes that officials say killed more than 230 people and
left thousands injured the night before.
The official death toll rose to around 235 late Thursday,
with at least 4,300 people injured, Venezuela Health Minister Carlos Alvarado
told state media. The number of casualties is expected to climb with thousands
reported missing and frantic rescue efforts continuing. The 7.2 and 7.-magnitude
earthquakes that struck Wednesday evening were among the strongest in Venezuela
in more than a century and were felt throughout the region.
The injured were pulled out covered in dust and blood, among
them children and animals. Venezuelan state TV showed dramatic images of
rescues, including a woman who was trapped under a cement slab with only a bare
foot poking out before rescuers slid her out alive. But few government search
teams were initially seen outside Caracas.
The coastal region of La Guaira, north of the capital
Caracas, suffered some of the heaviest damage and casualties. The country's
main airport is there and was closed due to damage, complicating aid efforts.
Venezuelans reeling
from quakes
Many were stunned Thursday morning as they saw buildings
reduced to skeletons, furniture hanging out of windows and helicopters circling
overhead. Buildings were flattened and streets cracked open. Families posted
missing-person flyers with photos of loved ones while others shared handwritten
lists of names as they searched. Venezuelans abroad struggled to make contact
with relatives due to interrupted phone service in the country.
In downtown Caracas, hundreds spent the night huddled in
parks, parking lots and other open spaces. Mother of three Dayana Delgado asked
where the heavy machinery was that government officials had promised and said
residents were the ones digging through crumpled buildings. “I want to know
where my child is, if he's trapped or in a shelter,” she said of her missing
8-year-old son.
One mother sobbed and collapsed in grief as the bodies of
her 3- and 10-year-old children were wrapped in blankets and carried away.
Others screamed the names of the missing. Some stood in silent shock.
Venezuelan authorities said they were diverting rescue teams
from other parts of the country to La Guaira, which is no stranger to natural
disasters: A 1999 mudslide killed thousands and is considered one of the
country's worst natural disasters. In La Guaira, Cristian Carreño stared at his
charred apartment building tilting precariously to one side.
“I lost everything,” he said. “There are people still
inside, I imagine, that couldn't get out. It's incredibly devastating.”
Retired schoolteacher Juan Alberto Mendaño climbed through
wreckage in La Guaira and past a dead body when he spotted a woman who was
trapped and signalling with her hand for help. “May God rescue her as quickly
as possible,” Mendaño said. “When we heard the scream, there was nothing we
could do.”
Media reports have shared notable moments of hope among the
destruction, including a young man brought out on a stretcher in the San
Bernardino district of Caracas to the applause of onlookers as his tearful
mother said, “Leandro, I love you.”
Venezuelan public television broadcast video of a girl
covered in dust and wrapping herself in a dark sweatshirt as she emerged from
rubble with the help of rescuers. Caracas metropolitan rescue team head José
Luis Núñez said she was found in a 10-story building in La Guaira that
collapsed and flattened “like a pancake.” “We want to highlight this girl's
strength, determination and will to live,” Núñez said.
Government and
rescuers face huge challenges
The natural disaster is the latest challenge for acting
President Delcy Rodríguez, the former vice president who took office in January
after the capture and removal from power of then-President Nicolás Maduro by
the United States. Venezuela has been facing economic disarray for more than a
decade and many people reject the legitimacy of the political movement
Rodríguez represents.
Rodríguez declared a state of emergency in an address to the
nation late Wednesday. She said the government was creating a USD 200 million
reconstruction fund for damaged hospitals and homes. She appealed to businesses
Thursday to make heavy construction equipment available for rescue operations.
“We hope to rescue as many living people as possible,”
Rodríguez said.
While Venezuela sits near multiple fault lines, its position
straddling the South American and Caribbean plates makes strong earthquakes much
less common than in other parts of Latin America. The US Geological Survey said
both earthquakes were cantered near Moron on the Caribbean coast, about 170
kilometres (105 miles) west of Caracas.
The one-two punch of the quakes, combined with the shallow
seismic movements, amplified the destruction, said Marcos Ferreira, a
geophysicist and researcher at the Geological Survey of Brazil.
“It is as if I am screaming and then someone starts
screaming, too. That amplifies the vibration and adds to the potential hazard,”
Ferreira said.
Shortly after United Nations officials in Venezuela called
on the government to lift social media restrictions so people can get
potentially life-saving information, Venezuelans in the country were able to
access X. The site had been blocked by Maduro since August 2024 in an attempt
to suppress the exchange of information among those who rejected his claim of
victory in the July presidential election.
Foreign governments
offer assistance
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who spoke to Rodríguez
following the quake, said the United States was immediately deploying
assistance. “We have a whole-of-government response. It'll be big; it'll be
fast; and it'll be effective,” Rubio said, while acknowledging the closure of
Venezuela's main airport near Caracas created logistical challenges.
Venezuelan public television showed the arrival of rescue
workers and aid from Chile at a military base in Aragua state early Friday,
while a team of 80 specialists and eight search dogs from Switzerland also
arrived with aid supplies. Turkey announced two flights will leave Istanbul on
Friday with military, medical and rescue personnel and a pair of search dogs.
Leaders from Qatar, Brazil, Spain, Portugal and Canada also vowed to send
assistance.
Rescue teams from El Salvador and the Dominican Republic
arrived in Venezuela on Thursday, along with rescuers and material aid from
Mexico. “No country is prepared to provide the response that's needed. That's
what neighboring countries are there for,” Dominican Air Force Major Carlos
Olivares said.
The Venezuelan diaspora also was helping. In Ecuador, Félix
Rodríguez said his store was receiving donations from his fellow Venezuelans as
well as Ecuadorians.
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