The Denver Post

Strong quake rocks Venezuela; buildings evacuated in capital

- By Fabiola Sanchez and Scott Smith

CARACAS, VENEZUELA» A powerful earthquake shook Venezuela’s northeaste­rn coast Tuesday, startling residents in the capital who evacuated buildings and briefly interrupti­ng a progovernm­ent rally in favor of a controvers­ial economic reforms.

The U.S. Geological Survey put the magnitude of the quake at 7.3 and said it had a depth of 76 miles. Its epicenter was 12 miles off the sparsely populated Cariaco peninsula that has seen several devastatin­g quakes in the past.

A witness in Cumana, the biggest city near the epicenter, said there were initial reports of several injuries at a shopping center where an escalator fell, but that there were no other immediate signs of damage in the vicinity.

In downtown Caracas, concrete from the unfinished Tower of David office building fell to the sidewalk, creating a hazard.

John Boquett, a firefighte­r captain in Caracas, said there were no initial reports of injuries or major damage in the capital.

The quake was felt as far away as Colombia’s capital of Bogota, where authoritie­s briefly closed the internatio­nal airport to inspect for runway damage. In Caracas, office workers and residents fled their buildings and homes.

The confusing moments after the quake were captured on state television as Diosdado Cabello, the head of the all-powerful constituti­onal assembly, was delivering a speech at a march in support of the socialist government’s recent package of reforms to rescue an economy beset by hyperinfla­tion and widespread shortages.

“Quake!” people yelled as Cabello and others looked from side to side with a mixture of laughter and concern. “It’s the Bolivarian revolution speaking to the world,” Cabello thundered to applause.

A similar-sized quake in the same area left dozens dead in 1997.

Interior Minister Nestor Reverol said that disaster relief teams had been activated, but so far there were no reports of fatalities.

“We ask for the greatest patience and tranquilit­y from the Venezuelan people,” he said in a televised address. “These situations require prudence.”

Power outages were reported across nearby Trinidad, where people ran into the street and gasped as large glass panes at one supermarke­t shattered and falling concrete smashed several cars. No injuries or deaths were reported.

Joan Latchman, a seismologi­st with The University of the West Indies Seismic Research Center, said it was the strongest earthquake felt in Trinidad since December 2016.

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