Venezuela earthquakes: Portugal's community in mourning and waiting for news
The Venezuela tremors left thousands dead and hit the largest Portuguese community outside Europe hard. Portugal has sent aid.
Some stories you read with a lump in your throat, and this is one of them. The earthquakes that struck Venezuela have left more than 1,400 confirmed dead and a trail of destruction still being tallied. Why does it hit so close to home here? Because Venezuela is home to one of the largest Portuguese communities anywhere in the world — Madeirans, above all, who emigrated over decades and built a second home there.
Among the victims are dozens of Portuguese and Portuguese-descended citizens, and many families still don’t know where their loved ones are. That’s the cruellest limbo of all: the call that never comes, the name that doesn’t appear on any list, the wait that drags on hour by hour.
Portugal didn’t sit on its hands
The Portuguese state has activated a support mission, with dozens of personnel and several tonnes of humanitarian aid heading to La Guaira, one of the worst-hit areas. It’s the kind of response you’d expect when so many family ties are at stake — and the Madeiran diaspora, no stranger to rallying round, is already organising collections and contacts.
For anyone with relatives in the region, the official advice is the usual but worth repeating: register and stay in touch through consular channels, which centralise information and help locate people. You can find guidance for Portuguese citizens abroad on the official Government of Portugal portal.
We’ll keep following this closely. For now, our thoughts are with them — and our hope that many of the missing turn up safe.
See also: the Strait of Hormuz reopening and the rejected labour law.
Image: Wikimedia Commons