Venezuela earthquake: Survivor pulled from La Guaira rubble as rescue effort intensifies
A woman was pulled alive from a collapsed apartment building in La Guaira after the Venezuela earthquake struck, as rescue crews and volunteers raced to dig survivors from the rubble.
The survivor, identified by local reporters as Graciela Mora, was wheeled onto a stretcher and spoke briefly to camera crews at the scene, describing how she clung to a door frame as the floors pancaked above her. (ilfattoquotidiano.it)
Rescue of a survivor captured on video
Video from the site shows volunteers cheering as they lift a stretcher from a mass of concrete and twisted metal, a moment that underscored both the scale of the destruction and the improvisational nature of early rescue efforts.
Witnesses said rescuers worked by hand for hours before the woman was freed, with neighbors and first responders forming human chains to pass rubble and support the extraction. (ilfattoquotidiano.it)
Twin tremors and structural collapse
Seismological data indicate two powerful quakes struck within seconds of each other, with magnitudes reported at 7.2 and 7.5, producing nearly a minute of sustained shaking that brought down poorly anchored buildings.
Engineers and emergency officials described the double shocks as especially destructive because successive collapse events left entire residential blocks pancaked and unstable. (streetinsider.com)
La Guaira emerges as hardest-hit coastal zone
La Guaira, the port city north of Caracas, was repeatedly singled out by officials and on-the-ground journalists as the worst-affected municipality, where scores of multistory apartment blocks were damaged or flattened.
Residents in low-lying and coastal neighborhoods described streets strewn with debris and families sleeping in open areas after buildings were deemed unsafe, compounding the immediate humanitarian needs. (elpais.com)
Official tallies vary as search continues
Authorities and health officials have issued differing provisional tallies as rescue operations proceed, with reports of hundreds of fatalities and many more injured; figures have been updated several times as new information arrived from hard-hit towns.
International news agencies and local officials have highlighted the volatility of casualty data in the immediate aftermath, stressing that final numbers will depend on the progress of searches beneath collapsed structures. (apnews.com)
International rescue teams and local volunteers mobilize
Foreign urban search-and-rescue teams began arriving on Friday, joining Venezuelan crews and scores of volunteers who have been digging by hand to reach trapped residents.
Aid coordinators said the inflow of specialized equipment and trained personnel was critical to reach survivors buried under concrete, even as aftershocks and unstable debris complicated operations. (investing.com)
Medical response and urgent needs
Field hospitals and temporary triage centers were erected near the most devastated neighborhoods to treat the injured and stabilize critical patients for transfer to better-equipped facilities.
Health authorities and relief groups emphasized urgent needs for surgical supplies, blood, water, shelter and logistics support to reach isolated pockets of survivors. (apnews.com)
Voices from the rubble
Survivors pulled from the wreckage described frantic attempts to reach loved ones and the shock of choosing between flight and shelter as buildings began to fail.
One rescued woman said she had not yet had time to process grief or relief after being saved, reflecting the emotional toll carried by those who escaped and the deep uncertainty faced by families still waiting for news. (ilfattoquotidiano.it)
The immediate aftermath has left communities grappling with widespread damage, a patchwork of provisional casualty counts and an urgent scramble for aid, even as volunteers and international teams continue to search for those still trapped beneath the ruins.