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  • JUDY WOODRUFF: From Mexico to the Caribbean, natural disasters dominated this day.

  • First, the earthquake that rocked Central Mexico on Tuesday.

  • The death toll rose to 223 today, and the nation's president warned, every minute counts

  • to save lives.

  • A desperate search for life today in Mexico City, police, firefighters and volunteers

  • digging into a collapsed school.

  • Sometimes, they found survivors, sometimes not, but the search went on.

  • GABRIEL URIBE, Volunteer (through translator): People are helping.

  • We are gathering at the collection center and managing as we can.

  • People are showing a lot of solidarity.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: The quake hit Tuesday afternoon near the Puebla state town of Raboso, 76 miles

  • southeast of Mexico City.

  • The violence of the shaking was evident: Buildings swayed and convulsed, and at least 44 collapsed,

  • lost in plumes of smoke.

  • Pleasure boats were tossed like toys in a bathtub.

  • Terrified people streamed from homes and offices.

  • MAN (through translator): Horrible, horrible, frighteningly horrible.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: A wing of a school pancaked into concrete slabs.

  • Rescuers dug frantically, some with bare hands.

  • At times, raised arms signaled the crowd for silence as they listened for sounds of life.

  • The search went on through the night, under the glare of floodlights and the watchful

  • eye of anxious parents.

  • DIANA LIMON, Earthquake Victim (through translator): My kids go to school on the next street, and

  • when I saw the school, I panicked, and I ran and I ran for my children.

  • I spent all afternoon here watching them rescue people.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: Crews brought in wooden beams to shore up the school building.

  • And, ultimately, they spotted one survivor, but pulled 25 bodies from the rubble, all

  • but four of them children.

  • The same scenes were repeated over and over across the region, hundreds of people hunting

  • for the living and dead, and survivors telling of narrow escapes.

  • ALMA GONZALEZ, Earthquake Victim (through translator): It was a very hard hit that went

  • down.

  • I went to find my child and I couldn't.

  • I was trapped on the third floor, and the people in the house next door helped me get

  • out with a ladder.

  • I am just grateful to God that we are here for something.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: In Morelos state, where 60 percent of residents lost power, they began

  • burying their dead and surveying the damage today.

  • SILVESTRE TINOCO, Earthquake Victim (through translator): The good thing is that my wife

  • and my grandson were the only ones there.

  • She's injured a little, but she's there alive.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: The quake hit less than two weeks after even stronger tremor struck Southern

  • Mexico, and killed nearly 100 people.

  • It also came on the 32nd anniversary of the 1985 earthquake in Mexico City that killed

  • thousands.

  • There had even been earthquake drills yesterday morning.

  • In a national address last night, Mexico's President Pena Nieto spoke of his country's

  • resilience in the face of repeated disasters.

  • ENRIQUE PENA NIETO, Mexican President (through translator): This earthquake is a hard test

  • and a painful one for our country.

  • Mexicans have had very difficult experiences with earthquakes in the past and we have learned

  • how to respond to these incidents with a spirit of solidarity.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: From New York today, President Trump spoke to Pena Nieto at length.

  • And at the Vatican, Pope Francis led thousands of people in prayer for the earthquake victims.

  • For more, joining us from Mexico City is Gus with the Associated Press.

  • Gus, tell us where you are and what you have been seeing today.

  • GUS VALCARCEL, Associated Press: Hi, Judy.

  • I am in the Roma North district of Mexico City, a residential commercial area, and right

  • behind me, as you can probably see, is an apartment building that came crumbling down.

  • This obviously happened yesterday in the afternoon, and at least 20 bodies have been pulled out

  • of the rubble, Judy.

  • A very sad moment for Mexico and for this community.

  • The good news is, apparently, they are hearing some noises that the experts believe are people

  • who may still be alive inside those rubble.

  • So, they are not losing hope that they will find more survivors.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: Gus Valcarcel reporting for us from Mexico City, thank you.

JUDY WOODRUFF: From Mexico to the Caribbean, natural disasters dominated this day.

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墨西哥地震發生後,救援人員急於搜尋倒塌的建築物 (Rescue crews rush to search collapsed buildings after Mexico earthquake)

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