Desperate night search in Mexico school,
other ruins as quake deaths pass 200
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[September 20, 2017]
By David Alire Garcia and Adriana Barrera
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Desperate rescue
workers scrabbled through rubble in a floodlit search on Wednesday for
dozens of children feared buried beneath a Mexico City school, one of
hundreds of buildings wrecked by the country's most lethal earthquake in
a generation.
The magnitude 7.1 shock killed at least 217 people, nearly half of them
in the capital, 32 years to the day after a devastating 1985 quake. The
disaster came as Mexico still reels from a powerful tremor that killed
nearly 100 people in the south of the country less than two weeks ago.
Among the twisted concrete and steel ruin of the Enrique Rebsamen
school, soldiers and firefighters found at least 22 dead children and
two adults, while another 30 children and 12 adults were missing,
President Enrique Pena Nieto said.
There were chaotic scenes at the school as bulldozers moved rubble under
the buzz and glare of floodlights powered by generators, with parents
clinging to hope their children had survived.
"They keep pulling kids out, but we know nothing of my daughter," said
32-year-old Adriana D'Fargo, her eyes red after hours waiting for news
of her seven-year-old.
Three survivors were found at around midnight as volunteer rescue teams
formed after the 1985 quake and known as "moles" crawled deep under the
rubble.
TV network Televisa reported that 15 more bodies, mostly children, had
been recovered, while 11 children were rescued. The school is for
children aged 3 to 14.
The earthquake toppled dozens of buildings, broke gas mains and sparked
fires across the city and other towns in central Mexico. Falling rubble
and billboards crushed cars.
In a live broadcast, one newsreader had time to say "this is not a
drill", before weaving his way out of the buckling studio.
Parts of colonial-era churches crumbled in the state of Puebla, where
the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) located the quake's epicenter, some
100 miles (158 km) southwest of the capital, at a depth of 51 km (32
miles).
As the earth shook, Mexico's Popocatepetl volcano, visible from the
capital on a clear day, had a small eruption. On its slopes, a church in
Atzitzihuacan collapsed during mass, killing 15 people, Puebla Governor
Jose Antonio Gali said.
U.S. President Donald Trump mentioned the earthquake in a tweet, saying:
"God bless the people of Mexico City. We are with you and will be there
for you."
In Rome, Pope Francis told pilgrims that he was praying for all the
victims, the wounded, their families and the rescue workers in the
majority Catholic country. "In this moment of pain, I want to express my
closeness and prayers to all the beloved Mexican people," he said.
NIGHT SEARCHES
Residents of Mexico City, a metropolitan region of some 20 million
people, slept in the streets while authorities and volunteers set up
tented collection centers to distribute food and water.
Volunteers, soldiers and firefighters formed human chains and dug with
hammers and picks to find dust-covered survivors and dead bodies in the
remains of apartment buildings, schools and a factory.
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Rescuers work at the site of a collapsed building after an
earthquake in Mexico City, Mexico September 20, 2017. REUTERS/Henry
Romero
The middle-class neighborhood of Del Valle was hit hard, with
several buildings toppling over on just one street. Reserve rescue
workers arrived late at night and were still pulling survivors out
in the small hours of Wednesday.
With power out in much of the city, the work was carried out in the
dark or with flashlights and generators. Rescue workers requested
silence as they listened for signs of life.
Some soldiers were armed with automatic weapons. Authorities said
schools would be shut on Wednesday as damage was assessed.
Emergency personnel and equipment were being deployed across
affected areas so that "throughout the night we can continue aiding
the population and eventually find people beneath the rubble," Peña
Nieto said in a video posted on Facebook earlier on Tuesday evening.
In Obrera, central Mexico City, people applauded when rescuers
managed to retrieve four people alive, with cheers of "si se puede"
-- "yes we can" -- ringing out.
Volunteers continued arriving throughout the night, following calls
from the civil protection agency, the Red Cross and firefighters.
The quake had killed 86 people in the capital by early Wednesday
morning, according to Civil Protection chief Luis Felipe Puente --
fewer than he had previously estimated. In Morelos State, just to
the south, 71 people were killed, with hundreds of homes destroyed.
In Puebla at least 43 died.
Another 17 people were reported killed in the states of Mexico,
Guerrero and Oaxaca.
As many as 4.6 million homes, businesses and other facilities had
lost electricity, according to national power company Comisión
Federal de Electricidad, including 40 percent of homes in Mexico
City.
Moises Amador Mejia, a 44-year-old employee of the civil protection
agency, was working late into the night to rescue people trapped in
a collapsed building in Mexico City's bohemian Condesa neighborhood.
"The idea is to stay here until we find who is inside. Day and
night."
(Additional reporting by Anthony Esposito, Lizbeth Diaz, Daina Beth
Solomon, Stefanie Eschenbacher, Julia Love, Noe Torres; Writing by
Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Catherine Evans and Chizu Nomiyama)
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