Security guard rescued from Venezuela earthquake rubble 8 days after massive temblors: “Truly a miracle”
Catia La Mar, Venezuela — Hundreds of rescuers in Venezuela cheered and embraced Thursday after pulling a man alive from the ruins of a collapsed building eight days after deadly twin earthquakes, AFP journalists witnessed.
With the official death toll nearing 2,600 and huge numbers of people still missing, the rescue of security guard Hernan Gil after so long under the rubble was greeted as a miracle.
Gil was brought out on a stretcher after a painstaking operation to extract him from the collapsed seven-story building where he worked in Catia La Mar, a coastal area almost entirely razed to the ground in the June 24 catastrophe.
Federico PARRA /AFP via Getty Images
“This is truly a miracle,” Gil’s wife Gusbimar Gonzalez told AFP before his rescue.
“I’m completely amazed because it’s the first time I’ve seen so many countries come together like this to save a single person,” she said.
Rescue teams from seven countries — Venezuela, Chile, the United States, Portugal, Costa Rica, El Salvador, and Mexico — worked around the clock over the past three days to reach him.
Rescuers first made contact with Gil four days ago, reportedly buried under 140 tons of concrete. Rescuers fed him through a syringe while they worked tirelessly to free him.
Salvadorean President Nayib Bukele posted a video on X, showing rescuers carrying Gil out on a stretcher. “WE FINALLY MANAGED TO RESCUE HERNÁN!” Bukele wrote in the post.
It was a difficult operation in which teams had to avoid provoking the further collapse of already damaged, nearby structures.
“It is a very complex rescue,” Manny Sampang, a task force leader from the Los Angeles County Fire Department who is in Venezuela to help with rescue efforts, told CBS News before Gil was finally pulled out. “I have multiple buildings leaning into that building that we are trying to rescue him from.”
El Salvador’s president echoed that sentiment in an earlier social media post, writing that “the aftershocks have made this one of the most difficult rescues we have ever faced.”
Dustin Reynolds, a member of Virginia Urban Search and Rescue Task Force 1 who uses highly trained canines to search for survivors, told “CBS Evening News” that this many days after the earthquakes, the rescues mainly involve people trapped beneath “feet and feet and feet of rubble.”
“When we know the dog does his job, and he does it well, and then that family or that person survives and is rescued, it’s a phenomenal feeling,” Reynolds told CBS News.
More than 300 American rescuers and 23 of their canines are currently in Venezuela working to find survivors.
Rescuers have been finding small miracles amid the wreckage, including the rescue of an 18-day-old baby, who, along with his mother, was pulled from a collapsed high-rise after they were both trapped for 32 hours. In another instance, a mother and her 9-month-old baby were pulled from the rubble of a collapsed building with “only minor injuries,” Virginia Urban Search and Rescue Task Force 1 said at the time.
A small dog trapped under the rubble for five days was also rescued this week.
But hope has faded of finding many more survivors.
No signs of life
The majority of collapsed buildings in the hardest-hit city of La Guaira, just north of Caracas, have been marked with the letter “D” for “deceased” — a sign they had been searched with no signs of life found.
“Time isn’t wasted in a place where there is no expectation of recovering people alive,” said Javier Rodes, the coordinator of a Spanish rescue team whose sniffer dog Nala searched in vain through the rubble for traces of life.
Venezuela’s National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez said Wednesday that the number of deaths had risen to 2,295, and more than 11,000 people were injured.
He said almost 13,000 people had been left homeless.
Tens of thousands of people remain unaccounted for.
Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez on Wednesday declared seven days of mourning, saying the country’s “soul is torn apart by the human losses.”
The two powerful quakes, measuring 7.2 and 7.5, shattered entire neighborhoods in oil-rich Venezuela, which has suffered decades of economic crisis that devastated infrastructure and health services.
The country is also in a fragile political transition six months after the United States ousted leader Nicolas Maduro.
Fight for survival
The focus is now shifting to survival for those who escaped the quakes. Many are homeless and food and water are becoming scarce.
There have been widespread reports of theft. On Wednesday, four police officers were arrested after being caught by residents stealing valuables from the rubble.
Queues for aid are growing longer by the day, with many surviving on the goodwill of volunteers and donations from fellow citizens.
“Here, we were receiving nothing until last night when they started bringing water,” said 56-year-old Fatima Berroteran, who has been sleeping with her family in a parking lot since their home in a high-rise complex in La Guaira collapsed.
The World Food Programme on Tuesday appealed for $50 million to feed some 500,000 people for three months in Venezuela.
Risk of disease
Fears of disease were also rising.
World Health Organization spokesman Christian Lindmeier said health services in Venezuela were under “extreme pressure.”
“There’s an increased risk now of outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases,” such as measles and diphtheria, due to low pre-earthquake vaccination coverage, he said.
The quakes likely damaged or destroyed 58,870 buildings, according to a preliminary assessment of satellite data published by NASA.
You may be interested
Breaking down the constitutional questions in the transgender athletes case
new admin - Jul 03, 2026Breaking down the constitutional questions in the transgender athletes case - CBS News Watch CBS News This week, the Supreme…

Her Best in 20 Years
new admin - Jul 03, 2026[ad_1] “People think dance music is just superficial,” Madonna announces early on her excellent new album, Confessions II. “But they’re…

Fruit flies will stop invading your home when you mix 4 staple ingredients
new admin - Jul 03, 2026She shared her method to banish fruit flies (Image: Jam Press/Tom Allport)Fruit flies can become an absolute menace during the…


























