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Venezuela Earthquakes: Search for Survivors Continues with 235 Dead Confirmed

Rescue efforts continue in Venezuela after powerful earthquakes killed 235 and injured over 4,000. US and local teams coordinate amid heavy damage in La Guaira region.

·3 min read
People climb over piles of rubble, with a damaged residential block in the background

US Military Official Arrives to Coordinate Relief Efforts

A senior American military official has arrived in Venezuela’s capital Caracas to oversee US relief efforts, the US Southern Command (Southcom), whose area of responsibility covers Latin America and the Caribbean, stated.

US Marine Corps Maj Gen Kevin Jarrard is serving as the senior Southcom official on the ground to coordinate relief operations with local teams, Southcom announced in a post on X.

Opening Summary

Rescue workers and residents in cities across northern Venezuela continue to dig through rubble in a frantic search for survivors, more than a day after the country was struck by the most powerful earthquake in over a century.

At least 235 people have been confirmed dead, but authorities fear the death toll could rise significantly, with thousands reported missing. More than 4,000 people were injured in the magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes that struck less than 40 seconds apart on Wednesday evening in the northern states near the capital, Caracas.

The coastal region of La Guaira, where the country’s main airport is located, suffered some of the heaviest damage and casualties, as rows of towering apartment blocks were reduced to rubble while people desperately searched for missing loved ones.

People walk through rubble of collapsed buildings.
People walk amid rubble after a twin earthquake in Caraballeda, La Guaira state, Venezeula. Photograph: Federico Parra/AFP/

The UN’s humanitarian agency, Ocha, reported that more than 100 buildings had collapsed in the La Guaira region alone, including a large block of flats called the Ritasol Palace and the seafront Eduard’s Hotel.

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The acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, declared a state of emergency in an address to the nation. She announced that the government was creating a $200 million reconstruction fund for damaged hospitals and homes.

She appealed to businesses to make heavy construction equipment available for rescue operations.

“We hope to rescue as many living people as possible,” she said.

Dramatic scenes unfolded on Thursday of people being pulled out of rubble covered in dust and blood, but few government rescue teams were initially seen outside Caracas, according to reports.

Yamileth Jimenez, a resident of La Guaira city, said her 19-year-old son was still trapped in the debris of their seven-story apartment building.

“He’s under the slabs and there’s no machinery to get him out,” ‌Jimenez told .

The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, said the defence department would help search and rescue teams deploy to the affected region after the Simón Bolívar international airport was closed due to damage, complicating aid efforts.

He said the immediate priority was search and rescue.

“They have [lots of] collapsed buildings and so they will need a lot of help in terms of digging through that,”
Rubio told reporters, adding that the next 72 “golden” hours were critical.

A man looks at a damaged high-rise building in the aftermath of earthquakes in La Guaira.
A man looks at a damaged building in the aftermath of earthquakes in La Guaira. Photograph: Maxwell Briceno/

You can read this morning’s full report here:

This article was sourced from theguardian

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