Time is running out to rescue those trapped in Venezuela, officials say
Miraculous rescues days after deadly earthquakes02:09June 29, 2026, 5:35 AM EDT / Updated June 29, 2026, 2:47 PM EDTBy Elmira Aliieva and Abigail WilliamsHopes were fading Monday that survivors might still be found from the powerful twin earthquakes that rocked Venezuela, even as more international teams arrived to boost desperate search efforts.
A critical 72-hour window for rescuing people trapped beneath collapsed buildings has now passed, after a weekend that saw glimmers of hope for local residents and foreign responders scouring the rubble — including a father and his son pulled out alive after four days.
The death toll rose to 1,719 on Monday afternoon, according to Venezuelan National Assembly President Jorge Rodríguez.
With tens of thousands of people still unaccounted for, criticism over the government’s emergency response and limited access to heavy equipment in the hardest-hit state La Guaira continues to grow.
Three Americans are among those killed in the earthquakes, a senior official of the Trump administration told NBC News.
Of the roughly 5,000 Americans believed to be in Venezuela, 12 are missing and more than 300 have reached out to the U.S. State Department requesting assistance, according to a second senior administration official.
A task force of the U.S. State Department is currently coordinating emergency response efforts in Venezuela, the second senior administration official said.

Some 5,000 people were also injured and more than 15,000 people displaced, Rodríguez said Monday, adding that time was running out to rescue those still trapped beneath mountains of debris.
“We are in critical hours, in crucial hours to continue rescuing lives and to build camps where those people who have lost their homes, or who cannot return, for whatever reason, to their residences can stay,” Rodríguez said in a televised address Sunday.
The first 48 to 72 hours after a natural disaster are crucial to rescue efforts, though survival can be extended if people have access to food and water, according to international aid agencies.
In a televised address Sunday, interim President Delcy Rodríguez said that search and rescue operations would continue after 33 people had been found over the weekend.
“We recovered people alive today,” she said. “Therefore, the rescue operations will not be suspended.”

She added that electricity, water and road access had been largely restored in La Guaira, a coastal area near the capital, Caracas.
More than 46,000 people were missing, according to a website created to help families share details and the last known locations of their loved ones. It was not known how many of those reported missing had been found.
Even as the chances of finding survivors diminished with every passing hour, Venezuelans continued using shovels, ropes and their bare hands as they dug through mountains of collapsed concrete.
They were joined by a growing number of international rescue teams, who pulled multiple survivors from the wreckage, offering desperate families a rare glimmer of hope.
Among the rescues, teams from the United States, France and Venezuela pulled a man and his son from the ruins Sunday morning after they had spent four days trapped beneath the rubble.

Covered in dust, the pair were carried on a black tarp into an ambulance, where they were given intravenous fluids for hydration.
The State Department separately posted a video on X showing helmeted rescuers lifting a crying baby, wrapped in a blanket, from the rubble.
A Colombian rescue team also saved an 11-year-old boy who had been trapped about 10 feet beneath the debris after locating him with a scanner. He was carried away on a stretcher with a broken arm, while his mother and sister were killed.
The United Nations humanitarian affairs agency said Saturday that a total of 44 international urban search and rescue teams, comprising 2,245 specialists and 140 search dogs, had been deployed to Venezuela. More teams, including rescuers from Israel, arrived Monday.

The U.S. Southern Command shared a post on X early Monday showing Marines assisting the ongoing search and rescue efforts, saying they were working “around the clock.”
But while a few people were found alive, such rescues became increasingly rare, and with each passing hour the operation was increasingly shifting from a search for survivors to the recovery of bodies.
Frustration has mounted over what many Venezuelans saw as an inadequate government response, with soldiers, firefighters, police and emergency services struggling to respond to the scale of the disaster.
Many residents felt precious time had been lost, watching the chances of finding loved ones alive diminish.
Although the acting president said on state television that more than 14,000 military personnel and police officers had been deployed to assist with rescue efforts and maintain security, many residents in the disaster zone said they had seen little evidence of that presence.

“My family has been here since Wednesday after what happened,” Oraimis Rodriguez Ramirez, a member of a family who organized themselves as a rescue brigade, told NBC News over the weekend outside one of the collapsed buildings in Caracas.
She said no trained personnel or rescue teams were seen on site, adding: “We have no answers, there’s no organization.”
A number of civilians blocked an excavator from leaving the site of a collapsed building after state workers took selfies in front of the flattened buildings and left without helping, according to The Associated Press.
The disaster poses a major challenge for Delcy Rodríguez, the former vice president who took office in January following the U.S. capture of Nicolás Maduro.
Venezuela has endured more than a decade of economic turmoil, and many continue to reject the legitimacy of the political movement Rodríguez represents.
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Elmira AliievaElmira Aliieva is an NBC News intern based in London.
Abigail WilliamsAbigail Williams is a producer and reporter for NBC News covering the State Department.
The Associated Press, Ana Vanessa Herrero and Nicole Acevedo contributed.Badenoch blasts 'moaning' female Labour MPs over Burnham jobs 'quota'

Kemi Badenoch has told Labour women to earn a job in Andy Burnham's Cabinet instead of demanding they are handed jobs because of their gender.
The Tory leader lashed out today amid reports that female MPs are demanding the de-facto new prime minister introduce a 50:50 gender split 'quota' in his government.
Amid reports that former foreign secretary David Miliband is being lined up to return to the role, possibly with his brother Ed as Chancellor, one female minister also complained that Burnham could not have 'more Milibands than women' in the top posts.
But in a scathing article in the Times today Mrs Badenoch told them to 'stop moaning' and get chosen on merit instead of retreating into 'more of the failed identity politics that is holding back our country'.
'There are many, many reasons why you shouldn't have any Milibands in the cabinet,' she said.
'But complaining that the boys haven't given them the right jobs or that the boys are taking all the jobs, just shows that Labour's women still don't get it.'
The idea of quotas was also attacked by Baroness Jacqui Smith, Labour's Skills Minister.
Asked by Times Radio if Mr Burnham should reserve jobs for women, she said: 'No, I think what Andy Burnham should be doing is building the very best team around him to change this country.'
A letter written by the Women's Parliamentary Labour Party has called on Mr Burnham to ensure a 50:50 split between men and women in government jobs
Amid reports that former foreign secretary David Miliband (above, right, in 2010) is being lined up to return to the role, possibly with his brother Ed as Chancellor, one female minister complained that Burnham could not have 'more Milibands than women' in the top posts
But Mrs Badenoch told them to pipe down and get chosen on merit instead of retreating into 'more of the failed identity politics that is holding back our country'
A letter written by the Women's Parliamentary Labour Party and seen by the BBC has called on Mr Burnham to ensure a 50:50 split between men and women in government jobs after he succeeds Sir Keir Starmer.
'We are asking you to demonstrate this change from day one and address the toxicity and misogyny within our own party and government,' it said.
Labour has never had a female leader, while the Conservatives have had three, and Mrs Badenoch urged the government to follow its meritocratic example.
'If you run a meritocracy, then you do not have to worry about jobs for the boys,' she wrote.
'Every woman who is a Conservative MP, every woman who has ever won the leadership, has had to fight to get where she is.
'By contrast, Labour women are demanding guarantees from Burnham. But the truth is he doesn't have to give any guarantees.
'If none of Labour's women are prepared to get their hands dirty and challenge him for the leadership, their demands are toothless.'
'In fact, it's quite revealing that the women's parliamentary Labour Party has written to Burnham asking him to commit himself to at least 50 per cent female ministers.
'This has nothing to do with meritocracy. It is yet more of the failed identity politics that is holding back our country.'