Two boys pulled from Venezuela earthquake rubble among 33 people rescued over weekend
Desperate families have been digging through the debris by hand, trying to find their loved ones. "To be honest, it makes you feel kind of nervous. Any little noise... horrible," Jesús Andueza, a 64-year-old bus driver told BBC Mundo.Thousands of people are living in their cars or camping at places like the airport and golf course, away from buildings that could collapse.The golf course in Caraballeda has become an epicentre for the emergency response.
- ▪Desperate families have been digging through the debris by hand, trying to find their loved ones.
- ▪"To be honest, it makes you feel kind of nervous.
- ▪Any little noise... horrible," Jesús Andueza, a 64-year-old bus driver told BBC Mundo.Thousands of people are living in their cars or camping at places like the airport and golf course, away from buildings that could collapse.The golf cours
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Two boys rescued from Venezuela earthquake rubble after days of being trapped<div class="ssrcss-1553su4-ErrorMessage eitf6465"><div class="ssrcss-h7lv7m-StyledInnerContainer eitf6464"><div class="ssrcss-nbxsk2-TextContent eitf6461"><h2 type="normal" class="ssrcss-89o2pv-Heading e10rt3ze0">To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.</h2><p class="ssrcss-1q0x1qg-Paragraph e1jhz7w10">This video can not be played</p></div></div></div>Figure caption, An 11-year-old boy, named Moises, was rescued after days trapped beneath heavy rubble ByOlivia Ireland, Nicole Kolster and Norberto Paredes, BBC Mundo, Reporting fromLa GuairaPublished40 minutes agoTwo 11-year-old boys have separately been rescued from the rubble of collapsed buildings within hours of each other, after…
Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at BBC News.