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		In Mexico, frantic rescuers keep up 
		search for quake survivors 
		
		 
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		 [September 23, 2017] 
		By Julia Love and Alexandra Alper 
		 
		MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - An army of trained 
		rescuers and scores of volunteers carefully combed through the rubble of 
		Mexico's most deadly earthquake in decades on Saturday, hoping against 
		diminishing odds to pull more survivors out nearly four days after the 
		disaster struck. 
		 
		While rescue efforts at the sites of some collapsed buildings had been 
		called off, at others sweat-drenched workers kept up a frenzied pace. 
		 
		The 7.1 magnitude earthquake destroyed 52 buildings in the sprawling 
		Mexican capital early afternoon on Tuesday, leaving thousands homeless 
		and close to 300 people dead nationwide. 
		 
		Apartment buildings, offices, a school and a textile factory were among 
		the structures flattened. 
		 
		Maria Isela Sandoval waited anxiously outside a collapsed office 
		building in the trendy Roma neighborhood for news of her missing nephew 
		and possibly other co-workers trapped somewhere under the ruins. 
		
		
		  
		
		She said her nephew worked on the fourth floor of the building, and that 
		officials have told her they believe survivors could be trapped in a 
		capsule within the twisted steel and chunks of concrete. 
		 
		"We pray to God they are alive, that they can hold on," the 38-year-old 
		housewife said, her eyes red with exhaustion as she has not slept in 
		days. 
		 
		U.S. rescue workers went to work Friday in the collapsed office 
		building, looking for six people who were still missing. 
		 
		Mexican soldiers and volunteers, supported by teams from as far away as 
		Israel and Japan, have so far rescued at least 60 people from the ruins 
		in Mexico City and surrounding towns. 
		 
		After several days of searching, rescuers were finding more corpses than 
		survivors, and frustration was mounting especially as the government's 
		efforts were largely panned. 
		 
		Across the mega city of more than 20 million people, many whose homes 
		had become uninhabitable sought a place to call home, raising the 
		specter of a housing shortage. 
		 
		
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			Members of rescue teams search for survivors in the rubble of a 
			collapsed building after an earthquake in Mexico City, Mexico 
			September 22, 2017. REUTERS/Henry Romero 
            
			  
			Officials said there could be some 20,000 badly damaged homes in the 
			adjacent states of Morelos and Puebla. 
			 
			Julia Juarez, 56, sat in a park where the homeless set up tents. 
			"All the help we have received is from the civilian population. The 
			government has not sent anything at all," she said. "No food, no 
			clothes, no water, not even an Alka-Seltzer," she said, referring to 
			the pain relieving medication. 
			 
			Tuesday's massive quake hit on the anniversary of the deadly 1985 
			tremor that by some estimates killed as many as 10,000 people and 
			destroying scores of older buildings in the Mexican capital. 
			 
			Despite the shrinking odds that more survivors would be pulled out 
			from huge piles of debris, workers at many sites continued to dig on 
			the faintest chance at success. 
			 
			At the same collapsed Roma office building, volunteer coordinator 
			Angel Ortiz, a 36-year-old taxi driver, pointed to the results of 
			heat-sensing detectors that appeared to show signs of life somewhere 
			underneath the rubble. 
			 
			"There are still people alive down there," he said. 
			 
			Like many traumatized but determined rescue workers, Ortiz described 
			the past few days as an emotional roller-coaster, feeling encouraged 
			one moment but depressed the next. 
			 
			"For me, it's really satisfying to be here even though it's hard to 
			explain," he said. "There's so much emotion and anxiety." 
			 
			(Reporting by Julia Love and Alexandra Alper; Writing by David Alire 
			Garcia; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman) 
			
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