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Venezuela is racing against time on Thursday to rescue hundreds believed trapped beneath collapsed buildings after twin powerful earthquakes left at least 235 people dead and 1,520 injured, while authorities warned the toll could rise further as rescuers struggled to reach the worst-hit areas.
The shallow earthquakes, measuring magnitudes of 7.2 and 7.5 and striking just 40 seconds apart Wednesday, were the strongest to hit the South American country in more than a century and the deadliest in decades.
They devastated parts of the country's central coast and the capital Caracas, triggering widespread building collapses, power and communications outages, while raising fears of further destruction from continuing aftershocks.
Venezuela's National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez told a press conference Thursday that about 200 people remained trapped under rubble. "We are racing against time in the hope of rescuing as many people as possible," Rodriguez said.
Extension destruction
"This earthquake was horrible, even worse than the one in 1967," recalled 80-year-old Maria Romero, a resident in Caracas.
The capital city lies less than 200 km from the epicenters of both quakes, sending thousands of residents fleeing their homes into the streets.
On Thursday, Xinhua reporters drove to the hard-hit La Guaira state and saw collapsed apartment blocks and heavily damaged buildings lining the streets. The air carried the smell of gas leaks and burned electrical wiring, while smoke still hung over some of the worst-affected neighborhoods.
Among the survivors was Evelyn Freites, whose 14-story apartment building has been levelled to rubble.
"The building swayed one way, then the other," she recalled. "The stairway was buried under debris. We had to slide down because the steps were gone."

A framed photo of a girl is seen among the rubble in La Guaira State, Venezuela, June 25, 2026.
Pausing briefly, Freites fought back tears before saying quietly: "My home is gone."
Alongside the rubble, police sirens were drowned out by neighbors shouting and the dull thud of stones being moved by bare hands.
"Police came last night, but they didn't have the proper equipment," Freites told Xinhua. "In the end, it was the neighbors who became volunteers, digging with our bare hands."
Her nephew, Ronny Madrid, said many residents had been forced to return repeatedly to unstable buildings despite continuing aftershocks to retrieve water, food, clothing and medicine after nearby supermarkets and shops had run out of supplies.
Pointing to a neighboring residential block, Madrid said: "Other buildings weren't as lucky. There are still people trapped inside, and there are bodies."
Authorities said public infrastructure suffered extensive damage across affected areas.
Simon Bolivar International Airport near Caracas remained closed after sustaining severe structural damage. Parts of the capital were left without electricity, running water and mobile communications, while natural gas supplies were suspended in several affected communities.
Venezuela's acting president Delcy Rodriguez said the country's central coastal region bore the brunt of the disaster, describing La Guaira state as facing "a real tragedy."
Reasons behind severity