Families calling out to loved ones trapped in rubble by Venezuela quakes

People search through the rubble unprotected, using whatever they can

Bare hands and shovels shift through the rubble, while a drone scans overhead. Every moment, every action matters. It is a race against time to find survivors.

Here in the coastal state of La Guaira, which borders the capital district containing nearby Caracas, catastrophic damage is seen almost everywhere you look. The state has been one of the hardest-hit areas after back-to-back earthquakes struck Venezuela on Wednesday.

Residents and families are desperately searching the rubble for their loved ones and belongings. They are listening carefully for any sound that might indicate someone is alive trapped under the concrete and metal wire debris.

So far, officials have confirmed at least 1,430 deaths from the magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes – the latter being one of the strongest quakes recorded in the country in the last century.

Hundreds of buildings collapsed and beneath the rubble, thousands of Venezuelans remain. The number of dead and injured rises by the hour. The UN estimates around 50,000 people are missing.

National rescue teams are scarce, although international rescuers from Mexico, Spain, the US and the UK have arrived to join the rescue effort.

But, it is still not enough.

Humanitarian aid agencies say the first 48 to 72 hours are crucial for rescuing people alive, although this window can be longer if those trapped have access to food and water.

“Every person saved is a miracle,” says Jorge Rodríguez, president of the country’s National Assembly. “We will not hide anything about the scale of this tragedy.”

‘It’s impossible to rescue him without machinery’
In Catia La Mar, one of the coastal towns in La Guaira state, the mood is bleak. Few structures remain standing.

Government forces have distributed food and water to survivors, and interim President Delcy Rodríguez has said the government is deploying a comprehensive rescue response during these “critical hours to rescue people alive”.

People linger anxiously around areas where they believe their relatives might be trapped.

Jesús Suárez is one of them. He travelled 200km (124m) to search for his son, Jean Suárez.

“There’s no information at all. People who know him say they didn’t see him come out or anything.”

“I believe he might be in there,” he says pointing to the rubble of a collapsed building.

Suárez faces a dilemma that many here also share: “It’s impossible to rescue him… There is no sophisticated equipment here. A human being alone cannot do it – it’s too dangerous.”

The relatives of Carlos Eduardo, a 31-year-old trapped under rubble, do know where he is.

From time to time, they hear him speak or groan.

“We started calling him: Carlos, Carlos, son… And then he made a sound (a groan). That was about an hour and a half ago,” his cousin told BBC News Mundo.

“Since then, we haven’t heard anything from him – he hasn’t spoken again or given any sign of life. But he had done this before. Yesterday afternoon he did the same (groaning and then going silent). And so here we are, waiting for help, hoping we can get him out alive.”

Traffic and crowds can sometimes hinder the search operations. Soldiers and Mexican volunteers have repeatedly called for silence, so they can listen for signs of life under the debris.

People are helping however they can. Those who have drones are using them to search for survivors or the deceased in hard-to-reach places.

Families huddle around drone video feeds searching for anything familiar. A piece of clothing, a strand of hair, a belonging. Anything that might bring news of a loved one.

As time passes, the unofficial death toll rises – and so do the consequences.

“There’s a smell… the dead are already being felt. That’s going to make us and the children sick,” says Glendys Delgado.

Two buildings near where Delgado lives are collapsed, but there has been no official help, she says. “No one from the government has come here, but I thank God that people from Caracas have come to support us with food.”

Deiyer Gabril, 27, says every area has been affected, “Macuto, Caribe… everything over there is bad. And we can all feel the odour.”

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cp8l451420zo

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