MEXICO
CITY, Sept 21: Mexican rescuers raced against the clock on Wednesday
to save a 12-year-old girl trapped beneath a collapsed school and reach other
possible survivors buried in rubble in central Mexico following the country's
most deadly earthquake in three decades. At least 237 people were killed by the
7.1-magnitude quake that struck about 150 km (90 miles) southeast of Mexico
City on Tuesday afternoon, 32 years after a 1985 quake killed thousands. Rescue
workers were able to communicate with the girl, identified only as Frida Sofia,
who responded that there were two other students nearby but she could not tell
if they were alive, according to broadcaster Televisa, whose cameras and
reporters had special access to the scene. Rescuers previously had seen a hand
protruding from the debris, and she wiggled her fingers when asked if she was
still alive, Televisa said. The girl's full name was not made public, but her
family waited in anguish nearby, knowing that the bodies of 21 school children
and four adults were already recovered from the Enrique Rebsamen School. They
and other parents clung to hope after rescue teams reported a teacher and two
students had sent text messages from within the rubble. Rescuers moved slowly,
erecting makeshift wooden scaffolding to prevent rubble from crumbling further
and seeking a path to the child through the unstable ruins. As in rescue scenes
throughout the central Valley of Mexico, officials ruled out using heavy
equipment as long as there were signs of life below. Some 14 hours after the
effort began, rescue workers in hard hats made an urgent plea on camera for
beams and chains to support parts of the school ruins that were collapsing.
"We have a lot of hope that some will still be rescued," said David
Porras, one of scores of volunteers helping the search at the school for
children aged 3 to 14. "But we're slow, like turtles," he said.
Rescuers periodically demanded "total silence" bystanders, who would
freeze in place and stay quiet, to better hear calls for help. Similar efforts
have pulled more than 50 survivors from buildings around the country, President
Enrique Pena Nieto said in a national address. Such rescues lead to impassioned
cries of "Yes we can!" from responders and bystanders. Fifty-two
buildings collapsed in Mexico City alone, Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera told
reporters. In all the quake killed 102 people in Mexico City and the remaining
135 from five surrounding states. Another 1,900 people were treated for
injuries, the president said. The quake struck a mere 31 km (32 miles) beneath
the surface, sending major shockwaves through the metropolitan area of some 20
million people. Much of the capital is built upon an ancient lake bed that
shakes like jelly during a quake. Initial reports suggest that collapses were
limited mostly to buildings that predated the 1985 quake, after which stricter
building codes were enacted. "The central part of Mexico City, in the lake
bed, is always going to be a complicated place to build," said Rodrigo
Suarez, chief operating officer at Mexico City-based apartment developer Hasta
Capital. "These old buildings (may) survive an earthquake or two or three,
but since they weren't built to modern code, there's always going to be a risk
in major earthquakes." INTERNATIONAL AID The national electric company
restored service to 95 percent of the 5 million customers who had lost power,
Pena Nieto said, and the state oil monopoly Pemex said its installations
suffered no significant damage and that all its operations were normal. Mexico
was still recovering from another powerful tremor that killed nearly 100 people
in the south of the country less than two weeks ago. Reinforcements from other
countries began to arrive and more were on the way. The United States, Israel,
Spain, Japan and several Latin American countries had already responded with
technical assistance and rescue teams, the president said. A Panamanian team of
32 rescue workers dressed in orange jumpsuits and helmets and two dogs arrived
at Mexico City's international airport on Wednesday, prepared to go to work
immediately searching for survivors. They came self sufficient with seven days'
worth of food, water and supplies and prepared to work around the clock, said
Cesar Lange, leader of the Panamanian Civil Protection unit. The U.S. Agency
for International Development (USAID) was sending a Disaster Assistance
Response Team to help, at the request of the Mexican government, the agency
said. "The United States remains committed to helping our neighbors during
this difficult time," the statement said. Throughout the capital, crews
were joined by volunteers and bystanders who used dogs, cameras, motion
detectors and heat-seeking equipment to detect victims who may still be alive.
Pena Nieto spent the day surveying several of the rescue sites, making note of
the large number of university students and others have volunteered for the
search and rescue effort. "I have seen an active and very committed
participation from the Mexican youth. ... I have seen a lot of solidarity,"
Pena Nieto said. The president has been unusually visible since the two
earthquakes, a sign of the political sensitivity of disaster relief less than a
year before the next presidential election. "We're clearly aware that this
is a test we cannot flunk," said Senator Miguel Angel Chico of the ruling
Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI. REUTERS
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