Venezuela earthquakes kill 32 with many more feared dead

Watch: Moment earthquake hits Venezuela and leaves buildings collapsed

Two powerful earthquakes have struck Venezuela near the capital Caracas, killing at least 32 people and injuring more than 700, Interim President Delcy Rodríguez said.

The first 7.2-magnitude quake was followed 39 seconds later by a stronger 7.5-magnitude quake, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS), with witnesses reporting tremors in neighbouring Colombia.

Rodríguez declared a state of emergency and appointed a general to oversee the response as rescuers search through rubble for many feared trapped.

The USGS said: "High casualties and extensive damage are probable and the disaster is likely widespread".

There is a 44% chance of more than 10,000 fatalities and a 30% chance of more than 100,000, the USGS added, with a significant risk of landslides and liquefaction on the ground.

Announcing the death toll in the early hours of Thursday, Rodríguez said she did not yet have on the "hardest-hit region" of La Guaira, located near the capital.

She said rescuers were working to reach survivors, with support being sent from the US, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Mexico and Qatar.

President Donald Trump said he had instructed his government "to get ready to move quickly" in response to the earthquakes.

"The two major earthquakes that just hit the great people of Venezuela are both massive in scale and have left a devastating number of deaths," he wrote on Truth Social.

The US "stands ready, willing and able to help!" he added.

News imageGetty Images Rescue workers and police stand on the roof of a collapsed building amid rubble after an earthquake.Getty Images
Emergency services search through rubble following the tremors in Caracas

The magnitude-7.2 earthquake, initially reported as 7.1, was centred in the state of Yaracuy at a depth of 21.9km at 18:04 local time (23:04 BST) on Wednesday, according to the USGS.

The second earthquake's epicentre was 23km southeast of the town of Yumare and about 10km deep, according to the USGS.

More than 20 aftershocks have been felt since, AFP reported citing the president's office.

Maiquetía airport, Venezuela's main international airport located on the outskirts of Caracas, has been closed due to serious damage, Rodríguez said.

Interior Minister Diosdado Cabello said buildings had been down in Caracas, while videos shared on social media showed some cracked, badly damaged or collapsed.

A tsunami warning was issued for the coast of Venezuela and the islands of Aruba and Bonaire, but was later cancelled.

News imageGetty Images People run into a street away from buildings following an earthquake in Caracas, Venezuela on 24 June.Getty Images
People were pictured running into the street after the back-to-back quakes

Cabello said multiple Venezuelan states had been affected by the quake.

"This is a seismic event, everything indicates that it had a magnitude much greater than seven," he told VTV via telephone.

"It has been strongly felt in Trujillo, Yaracuy, Carabobo, Aragua, Miranda, Caracas and La Guaira."

Cabello added that in Caracas the neighbourhoods of Los Palos Grandes and Altamira were worst hit.

The two neighbourhoods were also among the worst affected in 1967, when the last major earthquake to hit the Venezuelan capital struck, killing 200 people and destroying buildings.

In a statement on X, Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado said: "My heart, my infinite embrace, and my prayers are with every Venezuelan home in these hours of anguish."

News imageMap of northern South America focusing on Venezuela, showing the location of two earthquake epicentres inland between Maracaibo in the west) and Caracas on the central north coast. The Caribbean Sea is labelled to the north, with neighbouring countries Colombia, Guyana, and Brazil also marked. An inset map in the top right shows the region’s position within the Americas.

"It's the strongest quake I've ever felt in my life," Nicole Kolster, a journalist and contributor to BBC Mundo said.

Kolster lives on the seventh floor of an apartment building in the Palos Grandes area, in central Caracas, where the shaking from the 7.2‑magnitude earthquake on Wednesday afternoon was intense.

"It started shaking, I saw the windows moving, and the only thing I could think to do was to get between the front door and a stone wall, which in my judgement is quite strong, to try to protect myself," Kolster recounted.

She stayed there "for quite a while," until she heard neighbours shouting for everyone to go down to the street.

"It was so strong that I thought the building was going to fall on top of me," she said.

One photograph taken by an AFP journalist showed a building, believed to be a bank in Caracas, in ruins.

Colombians reportedly felt the earthquake hundreds of kilometres away in the capital Bogotá, where some people were evacuated as a precaution.

The timing of the quakes fell on a national holiday in Venezuela, commemorating the 1821 Battle of Carabobo, a decisive victory by Venezuelan independence leader Simón Bolívar against the Spanish colonial power.

More people than usual would therefore have been at home than on a normal weekday.