MEXICO CITY
(Reuters) - Desperate rescue workers scrabbled through rubble in a floodlit
search on Wednesday for dozens of children feared buried under a Mexico C
ity
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 and less than two
weeks after a powerful tremor killed nearly 100 people in the south of the
country.
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, and parents at the school clung 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
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.”
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