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The hope of finding survivors of the Venezuela earthquakes has faded

Rescue teams in Venezuela lost hope Tuesday that they would find more survivors after hours of exhausting search for victims under the rubble of collapsed building.

Rescue teams from Ecuador, the United States and Canada are working together to help victims of the recent earthquakes. After more than 40-hours of work, rescue teams from Ecuador and the?U.S. halted their operations in Macuto in La Guaira, the state hardest hit by the earthquakes on June 24, when they stopped hearing back from a trapped mother and three children under a nine story building.

Major Jorge Montanero is the leader of the EQ11 Team from Guayaquil on Ecuador's Pacific Coast.

He said, "Unfortunately things have not developed favorably," as he stood in the rubble of the building after cutting through the concrete slabs to try and locate the trapped four victims.

Andrea Montilla sat on a plastic chair in the makeshift morgue set up by the state's main port. She waited for family members to arrive at the port and identify the remains of her cousin, who was also his grandmother.

Montilla stated that the 14-year old was found overnight in the rubbles of an apartment block and his family took the remains straight to the port.

She said that her cousin's mother was still missing.

An official who wasn't authorized to speak with the media said that staff at the morgue led families through a personal identification process. The official said that families can get death certificates and cremation authorizations after this.

The official who stated that?they were from La Guaira, and they had lost several family members to the earthquakes,' had no idea of the number bodies handed over or those awaiting identification.

SURVEYING?THE?DAMAGE

NASA estimates that 59,000 buildings have been damaged or destroyed as a result of the twin earthquakes. The earthquakes struck seconds apart and had magnitudes of 7.4 and 7.2. From space, the devastation is visible.

According to residents and survivors from different areas, not all collapsed buildings had professional rescue teams present. Instead, relatives and neighbors worked to remove debris in order to extract survivors or bodies.

"There's no doubt that the number is higher than previously reported." I can give an estimate. We are acquiring -- and this was agreed with the local authorities -- 10,000 bagged bodies," Gianluca RAMPOLLA, United Nations resident coordinator in Venezuela said Monday from his Caracas offices.

According to the government of Delcy Rodriguez, at least 1,750 deaths and thousands of injuries have occurred as a result of these earthquakes. Around 16,000 people have been left homeless.

According to a website created by the opposition party, the number of missing people is estimated at 43,000.

In a press release, Venezuela's PDVSA state-run energy firm and Domegas private gas distributor said they were inspecting the gas lines of some 600,000.000 Caracas consumers to detect and fix?leaks. They said that specialized equipment for detecting leaks had arrived in the country.

UN WARNS OF HUNGER AND DISEASE LOOMING

United Nations agencies warned survivors that they would be at risk from 'hunger and diseases' in the wake of the twin earthquakes.

World Food Programme has appealed for $50 million in order to provide emergency assistance to up 500,000 people within the next three month period. The agency also stated that it is able to feed 1 million people, if enough funding is obtained.

The WFP distributed rations of one month's food to 1,200 people in La Guaira, including dry beans, lentils and cereals. It also established temporary feeding centers throughout the state.

The World Health Organization had warned earlier on Tuesday that Venezuela's health care system was severely under strain. At least three of the country's hospitals were damaged, and six more were damaged or only partially functional.

WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier said that thousands of people who were displaced as a result of the earthquakes are also at risk for disease outbreaks such as yellow fever and dengue. This is especially true given the low vaccination coverage.

Washington has sent 89 metric tonnes of essential supplies to Venezuela. The U.S. Embassy in Caracas announced this in a Facebook post.

The embassy stated that "our team in Venezuela works intensively to set up the field emergency hospital." We will soon be able provide emergency medical treatment to those in need.

(source: Reuters)