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Disease and Food Shortages Threaten Venezuela Earthquake Survivors

30/06/2026 21:47 - Internacionales

A Tragedy That Never Ends

Following the magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes that struck Venezuela on June 24, 2026, the humanitarian emergency has entered a critical phase. While international rescue teams continue the search for survivors, authorities face a new silent enemy: disease risk and food shortages that increasingly complicate operations.

The official death toll stands at 1,719 confirmed dead, with over 5,000 injured and between 50,000 and 70,000 missing. The state of La Guaira (located just north of Caracas, Venezuela's capital, along the Caribbean coast) is the most affected zone, with 774 damaged buildings of which 189 completely collapsed.

The Numbers Behind the Tragedy

Confirmed Deaths1,719
Injured+5,000
Missing Persons50,000 - 70,000
Affected Buildings774
Countries Sending Aid24
International Rescuers+2,741

Miraculous Rescues

  • Father and son: Rescued after 4 days by teams from France and USA
  • 18-day-old baby and mother: 32 hours under rubble
  • 60-year-old woman: 86 hours of rescue work
  • 3-year-old boy (Klieber Morán): Nearly 140 hours under debris
  • Aarón Levi Cantillo (21 years): 106 hours of rescue

The New Challenge: Critical Sanitary Conditions

According to La Nación, rescue teams now face increasingly adverse conditions. Lack of drinking water, food shortages, and disease risks such as cholera, typhus, and other infections transmitted through contaminated water threaten both survivors and the more than 2,700 rescuers from 24 countries working in the area.

The morgue in Caracas receives between 40 and 80 bodies daily, with approximately 150 unclaimed bodies. This situation creates additional health risks in an already devastated area.

What is La Guaira? It's a coastal state just 30 minutes from Caracas, known for its beaches and as the main port of Venezuela. This proximity to the capital makes it a densely populated area, explaining the high number of victims.

International Solidarity Response

The international community has deployed an unprecedented operation:

United States

Donated US$ 300 million and sent C-17 Globemaster III aircraft with specialized teams

Pope Leo XIV

Donated 100,000 euros for humanitarian assistance

China

Donated 100 million yuan (approx. US$ 14.7 million)

Argentina sent 26 military personnel, canine units, medical teams, 2 water purification plants, 134 tents, and 48 kitchen kits. The contingent arrived in Caracas on June 27, 2026 at 2:30 AM and was deployed in Caraballeda, La Guaira.

Political Context

Following the capture of Nicolás Maduro in January 2026, Delcy Rodríguez assumed the interim presidency of Venezuela. Opposition leader María Corina Machado, 2025 Nobel Peace Prize winner, has been in exile since late 2025 and expressed her desire to return to help victims, but the airspace closure by the transitional government prevents her return.

US officials expressed frustration with her requests, calling them a "political maneuver," according to Reuters.

Four-Legged Heroes

Among rescue teams, Tsunami stands out, a border collie rescued from abandonment and abuse who became a hero by locating an elderly man trapped in Residencias Rita, in San Bernardino parish, Caracas. Member of the K-SAR ECID team, trained by Jorge Beens, Tsunami also participated in rescues in Turkey 2023 and landslides in Las Tejerías and El Castaño, Aragua state. His story recalls Orión, the rottweiler hero of the Vargas tragedy of 1999.

Bart, another Argentine rescue dog, also located two alive minors under the rubble in La Guaira, helping guide the excavation by Argentine Marines.

Sources: La Nación, Infobae, Reuters, official Venezuelan government data, WHO.

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Alfredo S. Quiroga