Orlando Sentinel

Puerto Ricans left homeless in wake of worst earthquake since 1918.

- By Danica Coto

GUANICA, Puerto Rico — Cars, cots and plastic chairs became temporary beds for hundreds of families who lost their homes in southwest Puerto Rico as a flurry of earthquake­s struck the island, one of them the strongest in a century.

The magnitude 6.4 quake that struck before dawn Tuesday killed one person, injured nine others and knocked out power across the U.S. territory. More than 250,000 Puerto Ricans remained without water Wednesday, and another half a million were without power, which also affected telecommun­ications.

In addition, more than 1,000 people were staying in government shelters in the island’s southwest region as U.S. President Donald Trump declared an emergency and Puerto Rico Gov.

Wanda Vazquez activated the National Guard.

The hardest-hit municipali­ty was the southwest coastal town of Guanica. More than 200 people had taken shelter in a gymnasium after a quake Monday, only for the latest shake to damage that structure — forcing them to sleep outside.

Among them was 80-year-old Lupita Martinez, who sat in the dusty parking lot with her 96-year-old husband by her side. He was sleeping in a makeshift bed, a dark blue coat covering him.

“There’s no power. There’s no water. There is nothing. This is horrible,” Martinez said.

The couple were alone, lamenting that their caretaker had disappeare­d and was not answering their calls. Like many Puerto Ricans affected by the quake, they had children on the U.S. mainland who urged them to move there, at least until the earth stops shaking.

While officials said it was too early to estimate the total damage caused by the string of quakes that began the night of Dec. 28, they said hundreds of homes and businesses in the southwest region were damaged or destroyed. Just in Guanica, a town of roughly 15,000 people, nearly 150 homes were affected by the quake, along with three schools, including one three-story structure whose first two floors were completely flattened.

“We are confrontin­g a crisis worse than Hurricane Maria,” said Guanica Mayor

Santos Seda, referring to the 2017 storm that devastated the island. “I am asking for empathy from the federal government.”

He said officials believe the homes of 700 families in his municipali­ty are close to collapsing.

Tuesday’s quake was the strongest to hit Puerto Rico since October 1918, when a magnitude 7.3 quake struck near the island’s northwest coast, unleashing a tsunami and killing 116 people.

More than 950 quakes and aftershock­s have been recorded in the area of Tuesday night’s event since Dec. 31, though most were too weak to be felt, according to U.S. Geological Survey. The USGS said that while it’s virtually certain there will be many aftershock­s in the next week, the chance of a magnitude 6 quake — similar to Tuesday’s — or stronger is around 22 percent.

 ?? CARLOS GIUSTI/AP ?? People wait for food Wednesday at a shelter in earthquake-ravaged Ponce, Puerto Rico.
CARLOS GIUSTI/AP People wait for food Wednesday at a shelter in earthquake-ravaged Ponce, Puerto Rico.

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