Venezuela suffered two successive major earthquakes on June 24 that caused devastating damage.
Authorities reported that 7.2 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes struck 39 seconds apart just after 6pm. The epicenters were close to San Felipe, Yaracuy State, about 120 kilometres west of the capital, Caracas.
The tremors strongly shook central and northern Venezuela and were felt as far away as Brazil and Colombia. Geological services registered 20 aftershocks in the following hours.
Emergency services, firefighters, and civil protection brigades were immediately deployed. Videos circulated on social media showed collapsed infrastructure in parts of the capital and nearby towns and rescue teams removing rubble to reach survivors.
Reports from the coastal of La Guaira showed completely devastated areas with rows of destroyed buildings.
Acting President Delcy Rodríguez addressed the nation, calling for calm and unity in the wake of the natural disaster and declaring a state of emergency.
Rodríguez decreed a suspension of educational and “non-essential” activities, as well as the Caracas metro and suburban trains. The Simón Bolívar airport in nearby Maiquetía was likewise temporarily shut down.
“The priority right now is to save lives,” the acting president told the press. “Later we will address the material reconstruction.” Rodríguez gave a preliminary figure of 32 dead and more than 700 injured.
The acting president called the situation in La Guaira “a real tragedy” and a “disaster zone” with dozens of collapsed buildings. She expressed condolences to relatives of victims and urged Venezuelans to report missing people or damaged infrastructure via a dedicated phone app.
Rodríguez went on to call on people to evacuate buildings with visible structural damage and urged medical personnel to report to their stations as soon as possible.
During her press conference, Rodríguez thanked multiple countries for expressing solidarity and offering support, and announced the imminent arrival of rescue teams from the United States, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador and Qatar.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated on social media that Washington is “immediately deploying search and rescue teams, medical resources, and humanitarian assistance to Venezuela.”
Caracas additionally received support from Bolivia, Brazil, Cuba and a host of other nations. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum reported that specialised rescue teams are being prepared and that her government is in contact with Venezuelan counterparts.
Some areas of the capital and nearby states remained without electricity hours after the earthquakes. Authorities temporarily disconnected the direct supply of cooking gas to avoid secondary fires.
[Abridged from venezuelanalysis.com.]