Deccan Chronicle

Frantic search for survivors

FRANTIC SEARCH FOR SURVIVORS

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Soldiers, police and civilian volunteers worked through the night hoping to find survivors beneath the mangled remains of collapsed buildings.

Mexico City, Sept. 20: Police, firefighte­rs and ordinary Mexicans dug franticall­y through the rubble of collapsed schools, homes and apartment buildings on Wednesday, looking for survivors of Mexico’s deadliest earthquake in decades as the number of confirmed fatalities stood at 248.

Adding poignancy and a touch of the surreal, the magnitude-7.1 quake struck on the 32nd anniversar­y of the 1985 earthquake that killed thousands. Just hours earlier, people around Mexico had held earthquake drills to mark the date.

One of the most desperate rescue efforts was at a primary and secondary school in southern Mexico City, where a wing of the three-story building collapsed into a massive pancake of concrete slabs. Journalist­s saw rescuers pull at least two small bodies from the rubble, covered in sheets.

Volunteer rescue worker Dr. Pedro Serrano managed to crawl into the crevices of the tottering pile of rubble that had been Escuela Enrique Rebsamen. He made it into a classroom, but found all of its occupants dead.

“We saw some chairs and wooden tables. The next thing we saw was a leg, and then we started to move rubble and we found a girl and two adults a woman and a man,” he said.

“We can hear small noises, but we don’t know if they’re coming from above or below, from the walls above (crumbling), or someone below calling for help.”

A mix of neighborho­od volunteers, police and firefighte­rs used trained dogs and their bare hands to search through the school’s ruins. The crowd of anxious parents outside the gates shared reports that two families had received WhatsApp messages from girls trapped inside, but that could not be confirmed.

Rescuers brought in wooden beams to shore up the fallen concrete slabs so they wouldn’t collapse further and crush whatever airspaces remained.

The federal Education Department reported late Tuesday that 25 bodies had been recovered from the school’s wreckage, all but four of them children.

In a video message, President Enrique Pena Nieto urged people to be calm and said authoritie­s were moving to provide help as 40 per cent of Mexico City and 60 per cent of nearby Morelos state were without power. But, he said, “the priority at this moment is to keep rescuing people who are still trapped and to give medical attention to the injured people.”

People across central Mexico already had rallied to help their neighbors as dozens of buildings tumbled into mounds of broken concrete.

Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said buildings fell at 44 sites in the capital alone as high-rises across the city swayed and twisted and hundreds of thousands of panicked people ran into the streets.

Parks and plazas in the center of Mexico City were meanwhile flooded with people unable or afraid to return home for the night after the quake caused their walls to sway and crack.

The destructio­n revived haunting memories on the anniversar­y of another massive quake in 1985 that killed more than 10,000 people, the country’s deadliest ever.

 ?? AP ?? A man is trapped in the rubble of a collapsed building in the Condesa neighborho­od waits to be rescued, after an earthquake struck Mexico City on Wednesday. —
AP A man is trapped in the rubble of a collapsed building in the Condesa neighborho­od waits to be rescued, after an earthquake struck Mexico City on Wednesday. —

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