The Columbus Dispatch

Rescuers not giving up yet in Mexico City

- By Patrick J. McDonnell, Ruben Vives and Kate Linthicum

MEXICO CITY — As the search for the last possible survivors of this week’s powerful earthquake intensifie­d Friday, the scale of damage across central Mexico became more evident.

At least 3,000 buildings in the densely packed capital have suffered damage from the devastatin­g 7.1 quake, Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said, with a number of structures declared uninhabita­ble.

Many others with cracked facades and crumbling balconies are still waiting for official inspection­s, leaving weary occupants uncertain whether to remain.

In the badly hit state of Morelos, where the epicenter of the quake was located, Gov. Graco Ramirez said 20,000 houses were damaged, along with 186 schools.

Heavy rains have complicate­d search efforts this week, forcing some crews to retreat amid piles of sodden debris, and more rain was expected Friday night.

Authoritie­s have not released an estimate for the number of people believe trapped or possibly dead inside damaged buildings. The most recent reports indicate that at least 293 people were killed in Tuesday’s quake: 155 in Mexico City, 73 in Morelos state, 45 in Puebla state, 13 in Mexico state, six in Guerrero and one in Oaxaca.

As the window narrowed in which trapped victims might still be found alive, Mexican authoritie­s assured residents that officials would not give up efforts to find anyone who may have survived.

“The work of rescue … will not be suspended,” Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto said in a visit to Puebla state.

Pena Nieto publicly rebuffed “false rumors” that rescue efforts soon would be suspended and heavy machinery deployed at damaged sites, a possibilit­y that has inspired panic among relatives of the missing. He said nothing would be demolished until after a census of damaged buildings was complete. Secretary of the Navy Vidal Soberon declared in a tweet.

Authoritie­s said rescue work was still being carried out in 38 buildings across the capital.

Rescue crews from around the world — including teams from the U.S., Israel and Japan — have descended on Mexico to help with relief efforts.

They have joined firefighte­rs, soldiers, naval officers and a volunteer force of search and rescue specialist­s known as the Topos — the Spanish word for moles.

On Friday afternoon, the Topos combed through the rubble of a collapsed five-story apartment building in the Tlalpan district in southern Mexico City. Rescue teams were using dogs and heat and sound detectors to look for life.

“It’s a very emotional moment when you hear a sound that indicates life,” said Alejandro Castro, who commands a Cancun-based unit of volunteers. “At that moment, you of course hope they will survive, but it is impossible to know.”

At least eight people have been rescued alive from the building, authoritie­s say. But on Friday, Azteca TV reported that five of those brought out were dead.

Workers removed their hard hats in respect as colleagues maneuvered one body laid out on an orange stretcher down from the rubble pile on a ladder. From there, they loaded it into a waiting morgue trailer.

Across the city, hopes that the missing would be found alive were being dashed.

“Throwing in the towel is not an option!”

 ??  ??
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS] [REBECCA BLACKWELL/THE ?? A list of people still missing after the earthquake is posted Friday outside a quake- collapsed seven- story building in Mexico City’s Roma Norte neighborho­od.
ASSOCIATED PRESS] [REBECCA BLACKWELL/THE A list of people still missing after the earthquake is posted Friday outside a quake- collapsed seven- story building in Mexico City’s Roma Norte neighborho­od.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States