Venezuela's earthquake-hit health system is in crisis

Buildings in Catia La Mar, La Guaira, Venezuela on Thursday June 25, 2026. Los Angeles Times/Getty
Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily.It’s been a very long week for Beatriz Armada, the Venezuela operations manager for the humanitarian nonprofit Humanity and Inclusion. Hers is just one of many non-governmental organizations that have been responding to the devastation of two massive earthquakes that struck Venezuela last week, which have left, by a conservative estimate, some 1,700 people dead and thousands injured, with more than 15,000 displaced from their homes.
Many survivors who were pulled from the rubble needed amputations, Armada told me, a further challenge for Venezuela’s health care system—and health care workers in Caracas were affected as well, making it “very complicated to be able to give medical attention,” she said.
Armada told me that around 38 structures related to health care infrastructure had been decimated by the earthquakes, including one that specifically provided help for disabled people, who are disproportionately impacted by earthquakes.
“There was nothing left of the entire building, and so many people with disabilities who lost their lives in this, in this particular space,” Armada said.
One disabled man and his family that Armada spoke to lost everything in their home, including hard-to-replace equipment “that he would normally need to be able to have dignity.”
“We’re mobilizing resources to be able to more directly support people with disabilities,” Armada said, including with mobility devices and rehabilitation, “which is also quite a main need at the moment.”
Armada says she’s heartened by the responses of people across other parts of Venezuela, where people are also being transferred for medical care, and by international support. She hopes it doesn’t end prematurely.
“We need this [support] to continue in the upcoming months, because I think it’s going to take months, or even years, to be able to fully recuperate from,” Armada told me.
Thomas Tuchel's flawed England squad construction is threatening their World Cup chances
As they schlep their way through a World Cup campaign that had started in such exemplary fashion, England are learning a lesson that many of their head coach's previous employers would have been happy to share for them. For all the many qualities of Thomas Tuchel, the head coach, not all of which were shining through in the 2-1 win over DR Congo, Tuchel the squad builder is not such a slam dunk.
That is something of a problem when your team, unlike all the others, does not have any checks and balances on how your roster is constructed because, well, it's international management. They stopped doing the whole selection by committee thing back in the 1960s. Your team, your rules, your problem when it goes wrong. And it really did come close to going very dramatically wrong in a way that would have surely have gone down as a failing of Tuchel.
It was not that Djed Spence, seemingly England's fifth-choice right back, was necessarily at fault for Brian Cipenga's opener. It was that it seemed inevitable the fault would come in that spot, where so much has been gambled on the fitness of Reece James. For years, Tuchel has been warning that tournament football is different, that one mistake can derail a promising campaign. You can almost see in his mind's eye that moment Trent Alexander-Arnold switched off in the 2022 Champions League final and Vinicius Junior beat Liverpool at the back post.
It is innate within Tuchel that he looks to mitigate against such risks. It is what makes him such an outstanding coach in knockout football, that he can grasp hold of a Chelsea side who seem to be going nowhere fast and turn them for a fleeting moment into one of the greatest defensive outfits European club football had seen for a generation. At their best, his teams see every risk coming a mile off. How then, could this manager respond to James suffering a hamstring injury by saying "no-one could see that coming." The sad reality of James' recent career is you could set your watch by his body failing him.
Inside 'football nerd' Thomas Tuchel's rise from German fifth-tier to leader of England's World Cup dreams James Benge
Even now, after they survived such an almighty scare, the squad which he announced a month ago and has had an opportunity to hone since threatens to be Tuchel's folly. The 52-year-old has left him overstocked in positions he is not using, scrabbling around for what he can get elsewhere, all while having only afforded himself few players who might really shake up his side.
Right back is the immediate crisis because, of course, he should have readied himself for a James injury. If Tino Livramento or Ben White had made it to June 17 in one piece, then perhaps it would have been justifiable to eschew the talents of Alexander-Arnold, which are numerous and dramatically raise a team's ceiling but are best expressed in a way that requires covering from others. When neither of those two were available, it seemed obvious that Real Madrid's right back would be a better choice than a repurposed Bayer Leverkusen center back or a Tottenham utility guy.
There are positions where there is not that much sense worrying about your cover. If Declan Rice goes down in the knockout stages England are in such deep trouble that it does not really matter who you have backing him up. Jordan Henderson is, by all accounts, a good tourist. Why not go for him? The same might also be true of Dan Burn, another well-regarded member of the camp, but after Trevoh Chalobah was called up to replace Livramento, England find themselves with six options at center back when fully fit and yet so pressed at right back that they're having to shuffle Rice out there at the death against DR Congo.
Bringing three strikers made sense if one of them was to be Ivan Toney, the archetypal big man to cause chaos in the mixer when nothing else would break down a low block. Perhaps the Al-Ahli striker would have been the next man up if Kane hadn't turned the tide with 15 minutes to go. Still, England have had three games where they have had work to do prising apart an opponent in the second half, Toney has played no minutes and Ollie Watkins only six as Kane's replacement when Panama were beaten.
This isn't even solving for problems that haven't presented themselves yet. Tuchel has given himself options; he just has not used them. Meanwhile, four wide options look one too few when Bukayo Saka is not being selected to play three games in eight days. Was the trio of Anthony Gordon, Noni Madueke and Marcus Rashford a little too one-note? These were wingers selected for when space opens up against more ball-dominant opponents but perhaps not with enough consideration as to who was going to find the gaps in the opponents earlier in the tournament.

This lopsided squad has the air of the head coach who went to war with the Bayern Munich hierarchy because they would not bequeath a Joao Palhinha on him, who insisted that Paris Saint-Germain furnish him with Julian Weigl and who convinced himself that Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang would get Chelsea firing days before he himself was fired. England's is a squad that, with the possible exception of Toney, is built to Tuchel's specifications. His defenders ought to be more versatile and agile than they are showing, his midfield prizes strength and verticality over elan and his attackers suit Harry Kane.
There was logic in that approach, certainly more than Gareth Southgate's 11th-hour conviction that it was the job of the England manager to jam the maximum number of club superstars on the pitch at any one time. It is just an approach that, in retrospect, has been taken to an extreme. When there is space for three outfield players, why not give yourself insurance for your relatively injury-prone player and add a few profiles that you would not naturally gravitate towards?
Even in this most trying of triumphs, there was a case to be made for Tuchel the coach. When he got his hands on his players at the hydration breaks, what followed was an immediate and pronounced uptick in performance. Playing Rice as a quasi-right back with a real license to bomb on was a shrewd move, one vindicated as he made an out-of-in run to the byline that allowed him to deliver the cross before the cross from which Kane nodded home the equalizer.
Tuchel, the coach, has such a track record of excellence in knockout games that he can be trusted to work around constraints that emerge on the pitch and off it as well as anyone. It is just a pity for England that so many of the binds their manager found himself in were those he made for himself.
Add CBS Sports on GoogleFever coach condemns 'absolutely unacceptable' online harassment of Alyssa Thomas after Caitlin Clark foul
Indiana Fever coach Stephanie White spoke out against the online harassment Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas has been receiving since the incident involving Caitlin Clark last week. White, who coached Thomas in Connecticut for two seasons, said the hate she was receiving was "absolutely unacceptable."
"I think as a league, as a whole, there's been so much more toxicity, racism, homophobia, straight-out nonsense, hate nonsense. And it is absolutely unacceptable," White said on Wednesday. "Most of it is coming from the online community. Most of this, in my heart of hearts, I believe, [is] not coming from WNBA fans, Indiana Fever fans. I believe that this is people who are using our league, using our players to further divisive agendas."
Fever head coach Stephanie White addresses Alyssa Thomas’ comments and “unacceptable” fan behavior: pic.twitter.com/55KB1zIX5z
— Tony East (@TonyREast) July 1, 2026
Thomas recently served a one-game suspension because her hand made contact with Clark's throat during the first half of their game on June 24. Clark played in the third quarter but left the game early because of ongoing back issues -- which also caused her to miss the following game against the LA Sparks.
Although Thomas said she didn't intentionally make contact with Clark's throat, she still accepted the punishment. However, Thomas shared on Tuesday that she and her teammates have been receiving a lot of harassment and even death threats since the incident.
White said that while it is valid for fans to be passionate about their favorite players and some criticism is welcomed and warranted, the online discussion surrounding Thomas had been taken too far and players need to be protected.
"It's not hard to not be a jerk. And if you are one of these people that are online doing this, do not call yourself a WNBA fan," she said. "Our league is about inclusiveness. Our league is about competition. Our league is about elevating, elevating women, elevating marginalized communities and being inclusive of all different walks of life. That is what our league has been about from day one. That is what our league will continue to be about. We will continue to compete at a high level and hold ourselves to a higher standard, continue to be on the forefront of social norms and we will continue to support one another collectively as a league. Players, coaches, staff, support staff, everyone. We are about elevating. We are not about demeaning, demanding. We are not about continuing this narrative. It's just absolutely unacceptable."
Alyssa Thomas says she received death threats after Caitlin Clark incident, calls out WNBA commissioner Lindsay Gibbs
On Tuesday, after Thomas spoke to reporters about the death threats, the WNBA released a statement condemning "any and all forms of hate."
"The safety and well-being of everyone in our community is always the league's top priority," the league's statement continued. "We are aware of Alyssa Thomas' comments, and what she and her teammates have experienced is completely unacceptable and not representative of the WNBA community."
Thomas served her suspension while the Mercury played the Toronto Tempo on Saturday. She will be back on the court this Thursday as her team hosts the Seattle Storm. Meanwhile, the Fever will hit the road to take on the Las Vegas Aces on Sunday. Clark's status for that game is still unknown.
Add CBS Sports on GoogleRescuer Finds A Plastic Backpack Sitting In The Sun — And It Isn't Empty
Rescuer Finds A Plastic Backpack Sitting In The Sun — And It Isn't Empty
It was the hottest day of the year.
By Elizabeth Claire AlbertsPublished on July 1, 2026 at 4:49 PMLate one afternoon in May, the rescue team at Celia Hammond Animal Trust in the UK was suddenly flooded with calls and messages. People passing through a housing estate in East London had spotted a domed plastic backpack tucked away off the road.
It was an unexpectedly hot day — far too hot to be outside, let alone be trapped inside a plastic cat carrier. There was no way of knowing how long the carrier had sat hidden from view. But for the three little lives inside, it was clear that every minute mattered.

Amanda Stevens, a volunteer rescue worker for Celia Hammond Animal Trust, dropped everything and rushed to help.
“This was obviously an emergency because they would have died from the heat in very little time,” Stevens told The Dodo. “So it was just a case of getting there as quickly as I could.”
When Stevens arrived, she could immediately tell the kittens were struggling: “They were all squashed in together, and the heat was coming through this plastic dome … and it was an absolute heatwave,” Stevens said. “They were in a really bad way.”

Stevens opened the carrier just enough to give them air, while making sure the kittens didn’t escape.
Then Stevens rushed them into her air-conditioned car and drove them to the veterinary clinic run by Celia Hammond Animal Trust.

Once they arrived, the veterinary team worked quickly to cool the kittens down and treat their heat exhaustion.
Amazingly, all three kittens — who were later revealed to be boys — made a full recovery. The rescue group named them Napoleon, Prince and Tom.
“These three boys are around three months old, full of character, and completely devoted to one another,” the rescue group wrote in a Facebook post following their rescue. “They eat together, sleep together, play together and seek comfort in one another's company.”

After everything they’ve been through, their rescuers knew the kittens needed to find a home together.
“We wanted them to go as a trio because they're very bonded and they really love each other,” Stevens said. “It's difficult to find homes for trios, but we have managed to find one.”

For Stevens, the most rewarding part of the rescue was knowing she’d arrived in time.
“I was just pleased that I wasn't too far away and I was able to get there straightaway, because they wouldn't have survived very much longer,” she said. “But I sorted it out and they were fine.”