Venezuela earthquakes: Portuguese and luso-descendant death toll rises to 107
The toll from Venezuela's 24 June earthquakes has reached 107 Portuguese and luso-descendants dead, with 57 missing. TAP resumes flights on 13 July.
The number of Portuguese citizens and luso-descendants killed in the earthquakes that struck Venezuela on 24 June has risen to 107, with 57 people still missing, according to the latest count from Portugal’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Among the community’s victims are 19 children, and 91 of the 107 dead also held Venezuelan nationality.
It is a heavy deterioration from the early weeks: when we took stock at the end of June, authorities were reporting 589 deaths nationwide and rescue teams were still pulling out survivors. Today Venezuela’s overall death toll is approaching 3,900, with thousands injured or displaced. The Portuguese community — one of the largest in the diaspora, concentrated around Caracas and neighbouring states — was hit hard by building collapses in the two quakes, of magnitude 7.2 and 7.5.
When does TAP resume flights to Venezuela?
TAP resumes its Venezuela service on Monday, 13 July, with one change: flights will use Arturo Michelena airport in Valencia while infrastructure problems around the capital persist. For many Portuguese-Venezuelan families it is the first real window for reunions — in both directions — since the operation was suspended after the quakes.
Portugal is keeping reinforced consular support on the ground, and families seeking information about relatives can reach the emergency consular line through the Portuguese Communities Portal, which centralises the ministry’s contacts.
The numbers are likely to keep moving: with 57 people unaccounted for and rubble still being cleared in several neighbourhoods, nobody in Lisbon or Caracas is calling this count final.
Image: BriYYZ / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0)