Deadly quake’s chilling timing
MEXICO: Desperate parents and rescue workers pulled through rubble in a floodlit search yesterday for dozens of young children feared buried under a Mexico City school destroyed by the country’s most lethal earthquake in a generation.
The magnitude 7.1 shock killed at least 216 people, nearly half of them in the capital, 32 years to the day after a devastating 1985 quake and less than two weeks after a powerful tremor killed nearly 100 people in the south of the country.
Among the twisted concrete and steel ruin of the Enrique Rebsamen school, soldiers and firefighters found 22 dead children and two adults, while another 30 children and 12 adults were missing, President Enrique Pena Nieto said.
There were chaotic scenes at the school as parents clung to hope their children had survived.
‘‘They keep pulling kids out, but we know nothing of my daughter,’’ said 32-year-old Adriana D’Fargo, her eyes red after hours waiting for news of her seven-year-old.
Three survivors were found around midnight.
‘‘Relatives of Fatima Navarro,’’ one soldier shouted through cupped hands at the school the Coapa district in the south of the city. ‘‘Fatima is alive!’’
The earthquake toppled dozens of buildings, broke gas mains and sparked fires across the city and other towns in central Mexico. Falling rubble and billboards crushed cars.
Parts of colonial-era churches crumbled in the state of Puebla, to the south of the capital, where the US Geological Survey (USGS) located the quake’s epicentre. As the earth shook, Mexico’s Popocatepetl volcano, visible from the capital on a clear day, had a small eruption. On its slopes, a church in Atzitzihuacan collapsed during mass, killing 15 people, Puebla Governor Jose Antonio Gali said.
US President Donald Trump mentioned the earthquake in a tweet, saying: ‘‘God bless the people of Mexico City. We are with you and will be there for you.’’
After night fall in Mexico City, a metropolitan region of some 20 million, people prepared to sleep in the streets while authorities and volunteers set up tented collection centres to distribute food and water.
Volunteers, soldiers and firefighters formed human chains and dug with hammers and picks to find dust-covered survivors and dead bodies in the remains of apartment buildings, schools and a factory.
With power out in much of the city, the work was carried out in the dark or with flashlights and generators. Rescue workers requested silence as they listened for signs of life.
Emergency personnel and equipment were being deployed across affected areas so that ‘‘throughout the night we can continue aiding the population and eventually find people beneath the rubble,’’ Pen˜ a Nieto said in a video posted on Facebook earlier yesterday evening.
In Obrera, central Mexico City, people applauded when rescuers managed to retrieve four people alive, with cheers of ‘‘si se puede’’ ’’yes we can’’ - ringing out.
Volunteers continued arriving throughout the night, following calls from the civil protection agency, the Red Cross and firefighters.
The quake had killed 86 people in the capital by early yesterday morning, according to Civil Protection chief Luis Felipe Puente fewer than he had previously estimated. In Morelos State, just to the south, 71 people were killed, with 43 in Puebla.
As many as 4.6 million homes, businesses and other facilities had lost electricity, according to national power company Comisio´ n Federal de Electricidad, including 40 per cent of homes in Mexico City.
Moises Amador Mejia, a 44-year-old employee of the civil protection agency, was working late into the night to rescue people trapped in a collapsed building in Mexico City’s bohemian Condesa neighbourhood. ’’The idea is to stay here until we find who is inside. Day and night.’’
Where a six-storey office building collapsed in Mexico City, sisters Cristina and Victoria Lopez Torres formed part of a human chain passing bottled water. ’’I think it’s human nature that drives everyone to come and help others,’’ Cristina Lopez said. ‘‘We are young, we didn’t live in ‘85, but we know that it’s important to come out to the street to help,’’ said Victoria.
Ricardo Ibarra, 48, did live through the 1985 quake and said there hadn’t been anything like it until now. He said he and friends just wanted to help.
‘‘People are very sensitive because today was the 32nd anniversary of a tragedy,’’ he said. - Reuters