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Rescuers search the rubble of Venezuelan earthquake, Thousands reported missing

Rescuers search the rubble of Venezuelan earthquake, Thousands reported missing
Rescuers search the rubble of Venezuelan earthquake, Thousands reported missing

Rescuers spent the entire night Friday searching for and saving hundreds of Venezuelans who were trapped under rubble. They also searched for thousands of others missing, after two of the largest earthquakes to hit Latin America in recent history struck areas around Caracas.

The government reported that?235 bodies had been transported to medical facilities, but did not provide a total estimate of casualties from the magnitudes 7.2 and?7.5?tremors which struck 160 km (100miles) west of Caracas Wednesday.

The U.S. Geological Survey predicts more than 10,000 deaths. A website designed to track missing persons and shared by leaders of the opposition in the politically polarized country listed 49,500 unaccounted people.

The Spanish Foreign Ministry confirmed the deaths of two Spaniards and that another 80 were still missing. Firefighters, soldiers, and distraught citizens searched through the shattered building as foreign rescue teams arrived. Some used torches and bare hands in areas where there was no power.

Yamileth said that her son, aged 19, was trapped in the debris of a seven-story apartment in La Guaira City on the coast near Caracas. In a country already weakened by decades of economic turmoil and political instability, thousands of people are now homeless.

Barrios are slums on hillside that are made of flimsy materials.

"My building has become uninhabitable, and I now have nothing." Suhayl Sarquiz said, "It's only me and my child, and I have no family in this country."

Beatriz Rodriguez (60) whose 60-year-old nephew had his legs amputated because he was crushed by the earthquakes. Another nephew died.

The government confirmed that 250 buildings were damaged or destroyed. The French Embassy, the Venezuelan Red Cross, and at least eight hospitals were reported as being badly damaged.

La Guaira was one of the worst-hit areas. It is the state on the coast that adjoins Caracas, and it also houses the country's main airport. Volunteers flooded the Caracas to La Guaira highway carrying water, food and medicines.

"We lost everything," Pedro Perez said, 64, a upholstery shop owner. He said that he lost his business as well as his home, and that he was now sleeping in the streets with his family.

"We hope help arrives quickly."

Near the epicenter, in Moron, an oceanside town in Carabobo, residents were without water and electricity. Families salvaged mattresses, TVs, and washing machines.

Journalists saw members of "colectivo", government-allied motorcycle clubs accused for years of harassing supporters of the opposition, helping rescue efforts. Even nations that had opposed Venezuela during its decades of isolation, political repression, and economic decline under the Socialist Party's rule pledged their support. Delcy Rodriguez, Venezuela's interim president, who was appointed after the U.S. captured her former leader and ally Nicolas Maduro, in January, has thanked U.S. Donald Trump and Russian Vladimir Putin for their support.

Washington lowered?sanctions in order to allow aid for earthquakes that would have otherwise been prohibited.

Donald Trump stated that the U.S. is "ready, willing and capable to help." U.S. Secretary Of State Marco Rubio stated that Washington would send rescue teams, while the Pentagon would assist with logistics and support Caracas airport.

HELP FROM ABROAD Rodriguez shared footage of Mexican soldiers with sniffer dogs arriving to the damaged airport in La Guaira, which was only open for state and military flights. Tom Fletcher, the U.N.'s chief of aid, said that the organization coordinated international rescue teams. "A massive collective effort" was needed to help a country with 8 million people who required humanitarian assistance before the earthquake.

The U.N.’s Venezuelan Human Rights Mission urged the Venezuelan government to lift some restrictions on social media. They called connectivity a “matter of death and life."

SpaceX's Starlink announced that it would offer free service to new and existing customers in the affected areas through July 25, and was working on deploying terminals to the worst-hit zones to restore communications. Foreign energy companies in the OPEC-member's crucial oil sector said that their operations were not disrupted and oil infrastructure was largely spared.

The Caracas Stock Exchange was closed and turned into a collection centre for aid.

The deadliest earthquake in Venezuelan history was the 1967 quake, which killed 240 people. Reporting by Vivian Sequera and DeisyBuitrago in Caracas, around Venezuela, and at TV; Tathiana Ortiz, Mariela Nava, and Keren Torres around the Americas. Writing and editing by Andrew Cawthorne and David Latona.

(source: Reuters)