‘I'm sure he must be looking for me’: The father waiting for his missing 10-year-old sonpublished at 10:27 BST
Norberto Paredes
BBC Mundo correspondent, reporting from La Guaira

Outside José María Vargas Hospital in La Guaira, a sense of desperation hangs in the air. Dozens of people crowd the entrance, searching for relatives missing after Wednesday’s double earthquake. To help, health authorities have posted a list of hospitalized patients.
Anxious faces scan the names in silence, caught between fear and hope.
A few metres away, Ali Rodríguez, a 50-year-old motorcycle taxi driver, says he was trapped for eight hours under the rubble of a supermarket before being rescued.
“When the shaking started, I tried to run with my wife, but we were dragged back inside. We ended up buried together, chest to chest, with a sheet of zinc through us. There was a child next to me… he died. An eight-year-old boy,” he says, his voice shaking.
“We were saved by looters [who came into the supermarket where we were trapped] — they were the ones who gave us this second chance,” he says, criticising the slow official response.
Their 10-year-old son had stayed at home while they went shopping. He has no news of him and refuses to leave the hospital, as he hopes his son will be brought there.
His wife has been transferred to a hospital in Caracas but he says he will stay there until his son appears.
"I think he's alive, but I'm afraid he thinks we're dead [...] I'm sure he must be looking for me."
















