MercoPress. South Atlantic News Agency

Tuesday, June 30th 2026 - 07:35 UTC

The Mexican detachment numbers some 280 soldiers, plus close to 300 members of the Red Cross, firefighters and civil protection, deployed as part of the DN-III civilian-assistance plan

Rescuers from the Mexican Army's Emergency Response Battalion (BAE), considered among the most experienced in the world in natural disasters, say the earthquake that devastated north-central Venezuela is “one of the largest tragedies” they have attended, above all because of the scale of the damage. The team is working in the coastal state of La Guaira, the hardest-hit area, where the official toll exceeded 1,700 dead on Monday.

The Mexican detachment numbers some 280 soldiers, plus close to 300 members of the Red Cross, firefighters and civil protection, deployed as part of the DN-III civilian-assistance plan. They are concentrated in La Guaira, where most of the casualties are recorded, and have one of their base camps at a former golf course in the tourist city of Caraballeda, converted into an operations center for international and Venezuelan teams and, at the same time, into a shelter for residents left homeless. From there, the rescuers travel in shifts of more than eight hours to the most critical points, which, they say, are “practically on every corner of every neighborhood.”