Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Quake fells Mexico buildings

People fill capital’s streets, dig with hands to free trapped

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

MEXICO CITY — A magnitude-7.1 earthquake stunned central Mexico on Tuesday, killing at least 139 people as buildings collapsed in plumes of dust. Thousands fled into the streets in panic, and many worked to help rescue those who were trapped.

Dozens of buildings tumbled into mounds of rubble or were severely damaged in densely populated parts of Mexico City and nearby states. Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said buildings fell at 44 places in the capital alone.

Tuesday’s earthquake struck on the 32nd anniversar­y of another major disaster: the 1985 quake that killed as many as 10,000 people in Mexico. It came less than two weeks after another powerful quake left 90 dead in the country’s south.

Mancera said at least 36 had died in Mexico City, and

officials in Morelos, just to the south, said 64 had died there.

At least 29 others died in Puebla state, according to state disaster prevention chief Carlos Valdes. Gov. Alfredo del Mazo said at least nine had died in the state of Mexico, which also borders the capital.

The quake caused buildings to sway in Mexico City and sent people throughout the city fleeing from homes and offices. Many people remained in the streets for hours, fearful of returning to the structures.

Mancera said 50- 60 trapped people were rescued by civilians and emergency workers in Mexico City.

The federal interior minister, Miguel Angel Osorio Chong, said authoritie­s had reports of people possibly still being trapped in collapsed buildings. He said search efforts were slow because of the fragility of rubble.

“It has to be done very carefully,” he said. And “time is against us.”

Electricit­y and cellphone service were interrupte­d in many areas, and traffic was snarled as signal lights went dark.

Mexico City’s internatio­nal airport suspended operations and was checking facilities for any damage.

There appeared to be widespread damage, including to a major highway connecting Mexico City to Cuernavaca, the capital of Morelos about 35 miles to the south.

Puebla Gov. Tony Gali tweeted that there were damaged buildings in the city of Cholula, including collapsed church steeples.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the magnitude-7.1 quake hit at 1: 14 p. m. and was centered near the Puebla state town of Raboso, about 76 miles southeast of Mexico City.

Much of Mexico City is built on a former lake bed, and the soil can amplify the effects of earthquake­s centered hundreds of miles away.

The new quake appeared to be unrelated to the magnitude-8.1 temblor that hit Sept. 7 off Mexico’s southern coast and also was felt strongly in the capital.

U. S. Geological Survey seismologi­st Paul Earle noted that the epicenters of the two quakes were 400 miles apart, and most aftershock­s are within 60 miles.

President Enrique Pena Nieto said on Twitter that when Tuesday’s earthquake hit, he was flying to Oaxaca to inspect the earthquake damage that occurred earlier this month. He immediatel­y returned to Mexico City, he said.

He said the National Emergency Committee would meet to assess the situation and coordinate relief efforts. Earlier Tuesday, Pena Nieto attended a memorial service for those killed in the 1985 earthquake.

In a Twitter message Tuesday after receiving news of the quake, President Donald Trump wrote: “God bless the people of Mexico City. We are with you and will be there for you.”

Workplaces across Mexico City had held readiness drills earlier in the day on the anniversar­y of the 1985 quake, a magnitude-8.0 temblor that killed thousands of people and devastated large parts of Mexico City.

In that tragedy, too, ordinary people played a crucial role in rescue efforts that overwhelme­d officials.

COLLAPSED BUILDINGS

In the neighborho­od of Roma Norte, an entire office building collapsed. Rescue efforts at the offices quickly got underway to save people trapped in the rubble. Several people suffered injuries and were whisked away in ambulances. Others lay on the ground covered in dust. An unknown number remained trapped or crushed inside.

Talia Hernandez, 28, was on the second floor of the building, taking a tattoo class. When the earthquake hit and tore through the structure, she said, she rolled down the stairs as they were collapsing. She managed to escape but broke her foot in the process.

She said others also managed to flee, and afterward even the area around the building was dangerous. The smell of leaking gas permeated the air, as it has across other damaged parts of the city. Emergency personnel at the scene were pushing bystanders away, fearing an explosion.

“I can’t believe I’m alive,” she said, weeping and in shock. Medics were pulling shards of glass from her foot.

The scene was cordoned off, and the injured were being carted away on gurneys and placed in ambulances. The building itself was unrecogniz­able — it had fallen entirely. The rubble, a brown-colored concrete, rose nearly 20 feet high. The neighborin­g building was partially destroyed in the collapse as well.

Gabriela Hernandez, 28, lay on a gurney, covered in blood and nearly speechless. Her boyfriend stood beside her, clutching her IV bag. The blood was not hers, they said. It belonged to someone who had fallen on top of her when the building went down. She said she had been on the sixth floor when the quake happened, yet managed to escape.

The scene grew frantic as dozens of medical workers, police officers and firefighte­rs shouted to see what people needed. They were hastily trying to make a pulley system to free people trapped near the top of the rubble heap. Constructi­on workers from a nearby site raced to the scene and lined up to help, bearing long wooden poles to help lift pieces of the structure.

SEARCHING THE RUBBLE

Buildings also collapsed across the neighborho­ods of Condesa, a fashionabl­e district in the city constructe­d atop soft soil and vulnerable to earthquake­s. Thousands of people stood in the streets, filling the popular neighborho­ods with a sense of dread.

On Laredo Street, an entire eight- story apartment building had fallen into the roadway, spilling a heap of concrete and rubble into the street. At least 100 people stood atop the pile clearing it by hand, piece by piece, passing boulders and twisted steel pipes along a human chain that radiated from the heap like spokes.

Shouts filled the air, men barking orders at one another. Then came a call for silence — to listen for the voices of anyone trapped.

Standing on the sidewalk, Salomon Chertorivs­ki, the secretary of economic developmen­t for Mexico City, said he believed that 10 people were trapped inside the structure.

Mariana Morales, a 26-year-old nutritioni­st, was one of many who spontaneou­sly participat­ed in rescue efforts.

She wore a paper face mask, and her hands were dusty from having joined a rescue brigade to clear rubble from a building that fell before her eyes, about 15 minutes after the quake.

A dust- covered Carlos Mendoza, 30, said he and other volunteers had been able to pull two people alive from the ruins of a collapsed apartment building after three hours of effort.

“We saw this and came to help,” he said. “It’s ugly, very ugly.”

At the Clinica Gabriel Mancera in Mexico City, more than a dozen hospital beds had been set up in the patio outside as a triage center. Leticia Gonzalez, a 45-year-old maid in a nearby apartment building, said she tried to race out of the building, but concrete crashed down as she fled. Her right leg was wrapped in a bandage as she grimaced in pain outside the hospital.

“We were all running like crazy,” she said. “This was the worst earthquake I’ve ever seen.”

Marisela Avila Gomez, 58, was in her apartment in the central Narvarte neighborho­od in the capital when the shaking began, toppling her furniture and shattering the windows. A piece of glass sliced deep into her right leg.

“I lost about three liters of blood,” she said. “My whole house is full of blood.”

Her husband, Francisco Vicente Lozada Garcia, a 55-year-old landscaper, tried to drive across town to get to his wife, but traffic was snarled and the “street felt like gelatin.”

The couple eventually made it to the Clinica Gabriel Mancera, where Avila Gomez was treated.

 ?? AP/EDUARDO VERDUGO ?? Volunteers search a collapsed building Tuesday in the Roma neighborho­od of Mexico City after a strong earthquake caused dozens of buildings to fall in densely populated areas.
AP/EDUARDO VERDUGO Volunteers search a collapsed building Tuesday in the Roma neighborho­od of Mexico City after a strong earthquake caused dozens of buildings to fall in densely populated areas.
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 ?? AP/EDUARDO VERDUGO ?? A constructi­on worker searches the rubble of a building for earthquake survivors Tuesday in Mexico City.
AP/EDUARDO VERDUGO A constructi­on worker searches the rubble of a building for earthquake survivors Tuesday in Mexico City.
 ?? AP/MARCO UGARTE ?? A man walks out of the door of what is left of a building in Mexico City’s Condesa neighborho­od.
AP/MARCO UGARTE A man walks out of the door of what is left of a building in Mexico City’s Condesa neighborho­od.
 ?? AP/REBECCA BLACKWELL ?? Rescuers pull an injured man out of a collapsed building Tuesday in Mexico City.
AP/REBECCA BLACKWELL Rescuers pull an injured man out of a collapsed building Tuesday in Mexico City.
 ?? AP/MARCO UGARTE ?? A woman in Mexico City tries to reach people by cellphone after Tuesday’s quake.
AP/MARCO UGARTE A woman in Mexico City tries to reach people by cellphone after Tuesday’s quake.

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