Earthquakes exposed Venezuela's weak emergency medical system, New York Times reports
ONP Summary
Two major earthquakes (magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5) struck north-central Venezuela on June 24, 2026, destroying buildings and critical infrastructure including hospitals and morgues across the coastal state of La Guaira and surrounding areas. Official figures reported over 1,450 deaths and approximately 3,150 injuries, with rescue efforts continuing while secondary challenges including looting and public health risks from collapsed facilities emerged. International humanitarian teams and American military personnel were deployed to support local authorities in relief operations.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets emphasize that the disaster exposes systemic failures—economic collapse, chronic government mismanagement, and inadequate emergency preparedness—framing the humanitarian crisis as rooted in institutional dysfunction.
Moderate: Centrist outlets focus on factual reporting of casualty numbers, infrastructure damage, rescue coordination, international assistance, and emerging secondary challenges such as looting and health hazards.
이 뉴스, 어떠셨어요?
한 번의 탭으로 반응을 남겨요 · 로그인 불필요
The back-to-back earthquakes in Venezuela last week knocked out power in two of the three public hospitals in the hard-hit coastal state of La Guaira, the director of the nonprofit "United Doctors of Venezuela" tells the New York Times.
New York Times reporter Genevieve Glatsky joins CBS News to discuss. ...