Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hope in the rubble

- GISELA SALOMON AND MARIA VERZA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Mark Stevenson of The Associated Press.

A handler and his rescue dog look for survivors Friday at the site of a quake-collapsed seven-story building in Mexico City. Mexican officials promised to keep up the search as operations stretched into a fourth day after people were still being found alive.

MEXICO CITY — Rescue operations stretched into a fourth day Friday after the extraction of survivors from the rubble in Mexico City, which spurred hope among desperate relatives gathered at the sites of buildings collapsed by a magnitude 7.1 earthquake.

Mexico’s federal police said several people were lifted out of the debris of two buildings Thursday. Rescuers removed or broke through slabs until they found cracks that allowed workers to wiggle through to reach the victims and lift them to safety. The city government said 60 people in all had been rescued since the quake hit midday Tuesday.

The official death toll stood at 295, with more than half, 157, in the capital. National Civil Defense chief Luis Felipe Puente tweeted early Friday that there were also 73 deaths in the state of Morelos, 45 in Puebla, 13 in Mexico, six in Guerrero and one in Oaxaca.

Mexico City’s morgue service said eight foreigners were among the city’s dead.

The city’s justice tribunal said Friday that the dead include four Taiwanese women. A South Korean man was also confirmed dead, as was a Panamanian woman, a Spanish man and an Argentinea­n.

At the site of a quake-collapsed seven-story building in Mexico City’s Roma Norte neighborho­od, rescue efforts were suspended overnight as rain drenched the area and destabiliz­ed the pile of rubble.

Workers were eager to restart Friday morning under overcast but dry conditions — as soon as experts could confirm it was safe to do so.

Jose Gutierrez, a civil engineer who has a relative believed trapped in the wreckage of the building and was working with the brigades, gathered other families of the missing amid an ad-hoc campsite of tents, tarps and plastic chairs to let them know what was going on. A list of 46 names of missing people was attached to a nearby lamppost.

“My family is in there. I want them to get out,” Gutierrez said, his voice breaking with emotion. “So … we go onward.”

Wrapped in a blanket, Cristal Estrada paced back and forth near the tent where she spent the night on the street and worried about her missing brother Martin, a 31-year-old accountant married with two children including a 4-monthold baby girl. She said she was frustrated not being able to personally go help remove the rubble.

“They keep telling us there is life in there, but we keep on waiting,” Estrada said. “There is life, yes, but we do not know if it is my brother’s.”

Rescuers from countries including the United States, Israel, Japan and Panama were at the site.

Meanwhile, the time was nearing for bulldozers to clear rubble and replace the delicate work of rescuers, though officials went to great pains to say it was still a rescue operation.

Those who witnessed the buildings collapse said the tragedy could have been much worse. Some buildings didn’t fall immediatel­y, giving people time to escape, and some shattered but left air spaces where occupants survived.

Security guard Felix Giral Barron said that after the quake started, he had time to run and tell people to evacuate his building. Then an entire apartment building across the street crumbled and a big tank of heating gas on its roof slid off, but didn’t explode.

Among the biggest disappoint­ments was the dashing of one of the most dearly held hopes — that a young girl trapped in a collapsed school had been detected alive by rescuers.

Since early Wednesday, the nation’s attention had been

glued to the effort to free the girl from the rubble of the school in southern Mexico City. Rescuers told reporters that the child, identified only as Frida Sofia, had signaled she was alive by wiggling her fingers. Rescuers said they even spoke with her.

The child became a symbol of hope, but no family members came forward to identify the girl, and officials said no student by that name was registered at the school.

On Thursday afternoon, navy Assistant Secretary Enrique Sarmiento announced that while there were blood traces and other signs suggesting someone could be alive beneath the school, all of its students had been accounted for.

“We have done an accounting with school officials and we are certain that all the children either died, unfortunat­ely, or are in hospitals or are safe at their homes,” Sarmiento said.

 ?? AP/REBECCA BLACKWELL ??
AP/REBECCA BLACKWELL
 ?? AP/MOISES CASTILLO ?? Rescuers on Friday search the rubble of building in San Gregorio Atlapulco, Mexico, that collapsed during Tuesday’s earthquake.
AP/MOISES CASTILLO Rescuers on Friday search the rubble of building in San Gregorio Atlapulco, Mexico, that collapsed during Tuesday’s earthquake.

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