The Phnom Penh Post

Massive earthquake in Mexico kills at least 90 people

- Yemeli Ortega

RESCUERS pulled bodies from the rubble and grieving families carried coffins through the streets on Saturday after Mexico’s biggest earthquake in a century killed at least 90 people, while elsewhere, two died in mudslides unleashed by storm Katia.

Officials raised the death toll from Thursday night’s quake as more bodies were found in the southern states of Oaxaca and Chiapas.

In the town of Juchitan, Oaxaca, hundreds of families spent the night camped in the streets, too scared to go back inside for fear of aftershock­s.

The Mexican Seismologi­cal Service reported 721 aftershock­s.

On Saturday, people in Juchitan queued up for food at a shop window as families carried flowers and wreaths, and eventually coffins.

Ignacio Chavez said his son died in the quake.

“He didn’t have time to get out and the building completely collapsed,” Chavez said. “It was a very old building, over 200 years old, and unfortunat­ely out of the seven people who were inside only four were able to be rescued. The other three died.”

In Juchitan, emergency teams with search dogs found the body of a policeman under the rubble of City Hall.

Record quake

President Enrique Peña Nieto described the quake as “the largest registered in our country in at least the past 100 years” – stronger even than a devastatin­g 1985 earthquake that killed more than 10,000 people in Mexico City.

Mexico’s seismology service measured Thursday’s quake at magnitude 8.2. The US Geological Survey measured it at 8.1 – the same magnitude as the 1985 disaster.

The epicentre of Thursday’s quake was in the Pacific Ocean, about 100 kilometres off the town of Tonala in Chiapas.

AFP reporters in Tonala saw residents salvaging belongings from their ruined houses.

“All my body is shaking,” said local Roberto Olivera, 39.

“Every time a car passes by, I feel like it’s an earthquake.”

Peña Nieto earlier toured Juchitan, its streets a maze of rubble, with roofs, cables, insulation and concrete chunks scattered everywhere. He said authoritie­s were working to “restore water and food supplies and provide medical attention to those affected”.

“I can’t remember an earthquake this terrible,” said Vidal Vera, 29, one of around 300 police officers who dug through the rubble. “I don’t know how you can make sense of it. It’s hard. My sister-in-law’s husband died. His house fell on top of him.”

In Tabasco state, two children were among the dead, officials said. One was crushed by a collapsing wall. Another, an infant on a respirator, died after the quake triggered a power outage.

In Xalapa, the capital of the eastern state of Veracruz, “two people died in mudslides” triggered by the rainstorm, Puente said.

In Tecolutla, a coastal town of 8,000 residents, trees and branches were felled as families hunkered down to weather the storm.

 ?? RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP ?? People look at excavators removing the debris of a collapsed market in Juchitan de Zaragoza, state of Oaxaca, on Saturday.
RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP People look at excavators removing the debris of a collapsed market in Juchitan de Zaragoza, state of Oaxaca, on Saturday.

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