Venezuela: death toll passes 580 as the world rushes to help
Two back-to-back quakes left a trail of destruction west of Caracas. Rescue teams are racing the clock while tens of thousands remain unaccounted for.
The count keeps climbing, which is the cruellest part of a disaster like this. The two earthquakes that hit Venezuela on Wednesday — one magnitude 7.2 and one 7.5, about 160 kilometres west of Caracas — have already left nearly 600 people confirmed dead and close to three thousand injured. And the most frightening figure isn’t even that one: a platform set up to log missing people held more than 49,000 names still waiting for news this Friday.
Two big tremors, almost one after the other, is a brutal combination. The first weakens the buildings, the second brings them down — often with people already out in the street or trying to work out what’s happening. That’s why these first 72 hours matter so much: it’s the window when survivors can still be pulled alive from the rubble.
Portugal is counting its own
For us, this isn’t a distant headline. Portugal’s community in Venezuela is large and long-established, and the Foreign Ministry has confirmed nine Portuguese dead and 56 unaccounted for. Behind each of those numbers are families here — across the country — glued to a phone, waiting for a call.
The world opens its doors
The international response was fast and, in places, surprising. The United States eased part of its sanctions to let through aid that would otherwise be blocked, and pledged rescue teams and military assets. Several European countries, Portugal among them, put civil-protection teams on standby through the EU mechanism.
For now the priority is simple and hard: get people out from under the concrete before time runs out. Everything else — rebuilding, accounting, understanding why so many buildings failed — comes later.
Image: Wikimedia Commons