The devastation caused by two consecutive earthquakes of magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 left at least 920 dead and more than 51,000 missing in Venezuela, according to official reports on Friday. The number of injured exceeds 3,300, while 243 people have been rescued alive.
Citizens take the search into their own hands
Inhabitants of areas such as La Guaira and Catia La Mar denounce the scarce presence of government rescue teams. With hammers and power tools, neighbors try to remove concrete slabs from collapsed buildings.
“My God, how do we get all the people out of there?” muttered Nazareth Jiménez, who is waiting for news of her brothers and nephews.
Omar Reyes walked among the rubble where two of his children are buried: “I was practically alone in this life.” He stated that about 20 relatives died.
Official response and international aid
The acting president Delcy Rodríguez assured that her government is deploying a total response in these “critical hours for the rescue.” He announced the militarization of La Guaira and the arrival of humanitarian aid. As of Friday, 861 international volunteers from Mexico, the United States, El Salvador, Switzerland and Colombia were working in the country. The UN reported that 25 search and rescue teams with 1,000 personnel are on the way.
However, residents consider the assistance insufficient. In Catia La Mar, looting of basic goods was recorded and the population improvised shelters in parking lots.
Stories among the rubble
Yuleidy Cadenas, 28, looks for her son, her mother and her brother in a collapsed tower in La Guaira. Friday was her son’s 12th birthday.
“I went up to the rubble and told them to yell at me, and no, no one. I just hope they get them out,” he said through tears.
The state press reported moments of hope: the rescue of a young man in Caracas and a girl covered in dust who emerged from a 10-story building. “We want to highlight this girl’s strength and desire to live,” said José Luis Núñez, head of the metropolitan rescue group.
Impact on the region
The International Organization for Migration estimates that up to 6.76 million people could be affected, about 2 million in Caracas alone. Loyce Pace of the Red Cross said: “People are still terrified to go back into their homes.”
The epicenter of the earthquakes was located near Morón, on the Caribbean coast, 170 kilometers west of Caracas. The superficiality of the movements amplified the destruction, explained geophysicist Marcos Ferreira of the Geological Survey of Brazil.