Venezuelan rescue teams and U.S. elite search units are searching for survivors after twin earthquakes struck Caracas on Wednesday [1], [2].
The disaster has caused widespread collapse across the capital, necessitating an international response to locate victims trapped beneath heavy debris. The scale of the destruction threatens to overwhelm local emergency services in the immediate aftermath.
Reports on the casualties vary as the recovery effort continues. One report indicates the death toll has reached 188 [1], while another states at least 164 people have died [4]. The number of injured is also subject to differing accounts, with one source citing 971 people [4] and another stating that thousands were injured [1].
Elite search teams from the U.S. joined local efforts to navigate the ruins of the city. These specialized units are utilizing advanced equipment to detect signs of life within the collapsed structures, a critical task as the window for successful rescues narrows.
Rescue workers are currently sifting through the rubble of fallen towers and residential buildings. The twin seismic events caused sudden and catastrophic structural failures across the urban landscape, leaving many residents trapped in their homes or workplaces.
Coordination between the Venezuelan government and international partners remains the priority as teams race against time. The focus remains on the most heavily damaged sectors of Caracas, where the risk of further collapse persists.
“Twin earthquakes struck Caracas on Wednesday”
The deployment of U.S. elite search teams to Caracas indicates the severity of the structural damage and a temporary alignment of international cooperation to manage a humanitarian crisis. The discrepancy in casualty numbers suggests a chaotic environment where official tallies are struggling to keep pace with the scale of the devastation.

