Reporter's Notebook: In the earthquake rubble, the determination of ordinary Venezuelans

Volunteers, translators, neighbors and community groups came together to help.

July 3, 2026, 2:04 PM

The powerful back-to-back earthquakes that struck Venezuela last week are a national tragedy. Tens of thousands remain missing and countless others have lost homes, livelihoods and loved ones.

Yet amid the devastation, what stands out is the determination of ordinary Venezuelans. Volunteers, translators, neighbors and community groups showed up because they believed someone had to help.

Sitting in the airport, preparing to leave a country I had never visited before, I remember the kindness of the people. Everywhere we went, they welcomed us. Venezuelans reached out online from across the country and abroad, often surprised that a major American news network was reporting from Venezuela and that we were able to work freely.

Aerial view of collapsed buildings in Caraballeda, La Guaira state, Venezuela, June 30, 2026, following earthquakes.
Miguel Medina,Pool via Reuters

During our time on the ground, we were not prevented from reporting. In fact, there was remarkably little official presence. Ordinary people appeared to be stepping in because they felt the government was not doing enough.

Again and again, families told us they had been promised government assistance that never arrived. Relatives said they were assured heavy machinery would be brought in to clear rubble and recover loved ones. In many cases, the equipment either failed to arrive or arrived without the diesel needed to operate.

Buildings destroyed following twin earthquakes are seen in Caraballeda, La Guaira State, Venezuela, June 29, 2026.
Miguel Medina/Pool/AFP via Getty Images

While families watched precious time slip away, rescue teams from abroad were reportedly redirected away from some sites, told by the police or the military: No, you can't come here, you must go somewhere else.

PHOTO: Yohancy Gil and her husband Sergio Guanipa wait for news from rescue teams looking for their children under the rubble at the site of a collapsed building in the aftermath of earthquakes, in La Guaira, Venezuela, June 30, 2026.
Yohancy Gil and her husband Sergio Guanipa stand on rubble as they wait for news from rescue teams looking for their children under the rubble at the site of a collapsed building in the aftermath of earthquakes, in La Guaira, Venezuela, June 30, 2026.
Ricardo Arduengo/Reuters

It's in this kind of dead-eyed bureaucracy where the authorities are simply used to saying no, where their instinct is to say no to people, to repress them, to stop them from having agency.

In a situation like this, people need agency, they should be helped and encouraged to help themselves.

Still, what I will remember most are the people.

Aerial view of collapsed buildings in Caraballeda, La Guaira state, Venezuela, June 30, 2026, following earthquakes.
Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty Images

There was Domingo, standing outside the collapsed building where he thinks his sister may have died. He told us he had been on a video call with her before the earthquake struck. He watched his young nephew bring her the alert warning of an impending earthquake. He watched them embrace and then the connection was lost.

He believes he saw the last moments of his sister and nephew alive. Days later, the family still had no answers about whether they had survived or if their bodies had recovered from under the rubble.

PHOTO: Venezuela Earthquake
Member of the Los Angeles County Fire Department stand on rubble of a building that collapsed during earthquakes that struck La Guaira, Venezuela, Tuesday, June 30, 2026.
Matias Delacroix/AP Photo/Matias Delacroix

There was also Sean Butler, of the Los Angeles Fire Department, leading an American search-and-rescue team. Despite the destruction, he remained convinced more survivors could be found. His team looked for signs of life beneath collapsed buildings and spoke of the void spaces that might sustain trapped victims for days.

Khaterine Roa cries as members of the Los Angeles County Fire Department search for survivors at a building that collapsed during the earthquakes that struck La Guaira, Venezuela, June 30, 2026.
Matias Delacroix/AP Photo

For families searching desperately for loved ones, that optimism became a lifeline.

Then there was Dayana Patiño and her newborn son, Juan David, just 18 days old. He survived more than 30 hours trapped beneath the rubble because his mother was determined to keep him alive.

A newborn baby was pulled out alive from the rubble of the city of La Guaira, Venezuela, after twin earthquakes hit the country in a video that was posted on Instagram, June 26, 2026.
Andreina Quintero/AFP via Getty

When we met her in the hospital, Diana was bruised, scratched, and recovering from a broken knee. Her son was unharmed, not a scratch on him.

Dayana Patiño speaks to ABC News after she and her 18-day-old son were pulled from rubble following June 24 earthquakes in Venezuela.
ABC News

But for all the extraordinary stories of survival, and we will continue to see those, this has really been a story about Venezuelans doing it for themselves.

Among those we spoke to, there was a widespread view that in a country with stronger institutions, buildings may be less likely to fail, and emergency responses could be swifter and more coordinated.

The question now is whether Venezuela will allow civil society to organize and support recovery efforts, as is common in many democracies, or whether the government will continue to insist that it has done all it can and dismiss calls for greater transparency and accountability.

Relatives of a victim of the June 24 twin earthquakes mourn the death of their loved one during the burial at the Southern General Cemetery in Caracas, June 29, 2026.
Rosali Hernandez/AFP via Getty Images

As I leave, I am thinking about those who have lost everything and will need support for months or years to come, and whether their government will be the ones to help them.

But I leave with one certainty, Venezuela is filled with active, committed and courageous people. In the face of immense loss, they have shown an extraordinary willingness to help one another.

That is what more than anything else, what I will remember.

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