Harrowing footage has revealed the extent of the damage and chaos inflicted on Venezuela by a pair of massive earthquakes last night. The back-to-back 7.1 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes struck near the coast, sending terrified residents racing out from swaying apartment blocks as walls collapsed and clouds of dust rose over the capital.'High casualties and extensive damage are probable and the disaster is likely widespread,' the US Geological Survey said, 'with an initial death toll estimate likely between 10,000 and 100,000.'
On Thursday, Venezuelan authorities said at least 164 people had been killed, while hundreds more have been injured. The quakes are among the strongest to strike Venezuela in more than a century, although strong earthquakes are unusual in the country. In one particularly shocking video, a building's façade collapsed on a busy street, forcing people to flee in terror. Venezuelan citizens were heard screaming in terror, and seen running for their lives, catching each other if they fell down. A huge wave of dust and debris was kicked up, seemingly blinding those on the street. People held onto each other and screamed in terror when the earthquakes struck One clip showed the sun setting over a nearly-collapsed building Earthquakes in Venezuela leave Maiquetia airport filled with rubble Loaded: 0%Progress: 0%0:00LIVEThe man filming the clip was heard shouting someone's name, apparently fearing the worst. Car alarms were heard blaring as bricks and mortar continued to fall. In another clip, the top of a building appeared to fall several storeys and crash onto the street below, while in a third clip, glass could be heard shattering as buildings on a dense street were rocked violently. In footage from inside Simón Bolívar International Airport, a child was heard screaming in terror as many of the building's internal structures collapsed. As the whole airport shook, terrified people ran for their lives. Lights flickered on and off as the quake rattled electrical infrastructure. Swathes of the airport's ceiling collapsed, leaving a plume of dust from broken construction material in the air. Women were seen trying desperately to carry small children while guiding their families to safety. Following the second earthquake, rescuers jumped into action and began searching for any and all signs of life. A woman walks past a building damaged during an earthquake in La Guaira, Venezuela, Thursday, June 25, 2026 Residents look at a building damaged during the twin 7.2 and 7.5-magnitude earthquakes that struck the country, in Catia la Mar, Venezuela, 25 June 2026 Footage showed a maroon car partially buried under the remains of a building People were running for their lives in Simón Bolívar International Airport On Thursday, Venezuelan authorities said at least 164 people had been killed, while hundreds more have been injuredIn one clip shared across the world, a large group of first responders were seen working to pull survivors from the rubble of a collapsed building. Local residents of a collapsed building were seen working in tandem with the rescuers to get their area cleared as soon as possible, though many watched in horror from the sidelines as countless people scrambled over what once would've been their homes. One shocking clip showed a group of people at a baseball stadium, watching in horror as a far off building collapsed and left a mass of dust floating through the air. A horrified onlooker was heard exclaiming: 'Dio mio... [My god]' A clip taken in the city of La Guaira showed the sun setting over a building that had almost completely collapsed. Drivers were heard slamming on their horns, while people on-foot were heard mourning the destruction of their city. Smoke was seen rising across La Guaira, each tower coming from another part of the municipality. The camera pans to another building, this one totally destroyed. A maroon car was seen crushed, with its back end poking out from under the mountain of rubble. A man was seen wrapping a large strap around the wreck, setting up an attempt to pull it free with another vehicle. Residents search through the rubble of one of the blocks of flats that collapsed in the twin 7.2 and 7.5-magnitude earthquakes that struck the country, in Catia la Mar, Venezuela, 25 June 2026 Patients lie outside a hospital evacuated after it was damaged in an earthquake in Catia La Mar, Venezuela, Thursday, June 25, 2026 The first tremor happened at 6:04pm Venezuela time about 17 miles northwest of MontalbánIn another clip from La Guaira, a man on a motorcycle captured entire homes upended following the earthquake.Two people were seen in the footage looking in through the fence, staring at the decimated building. The motorcycle driver then drove past a building that has almost completely collapsed, with just its ground floor staying upright. Although the epicentre was on land, the US Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said tsunami waves were possible along the coasts of Venezuela, Bonaire, Curaçao and Aruba.The first tremor happened at 6:04pm Venezuela time about 17 miles northwest of Montalbán, Venezuela and about 104 miles west of Caracas. The quake had a depth of 8 miles. A second powerful earthquake with a magnitude of 7.5 then struck the country just one minute later, according to the USGS. The second quake had a depth of 6 miles and its epicentre was 10 miles southwest of the city of Morón, Venezuela. Residents walk in the street following the twin 7.2 and 7.5-magnitude earthquakes that struck the country, in Catia la Mar, Venezuela, 25 June 2026 At a baseball game, a large plume of dust and rubble was seen in the distance Footage Simón Bolívar International Airport showed the internal structures ripped apart In a clip from the city of La Guaira, a man on a motorcycle captured entire homes upended following the earthquakeThe quakes struck while many Venezuelans were at home marking Battle of Carabobo Day, the public holiday commemorating the 1821 victory that helped secure the country's independence from Spain. While Venezuela sits near multiple fault lines, its position straddling the South American and Caribbean plates makes earthquakes much less common than in other parts of Latin America. Along the Pacific coast - in Mexico and Chile, for example - earthquakes are frequent; the two countries sit along the seismically active tectonic belt known as the 'Pacific Ring of Fire,' responsible for 90% of earthquakes, according to the USGS.
�� CONTENT HASHES:
SHA-256: 879721a72f8cedcb4ce4f53ed73a956ac3971b0a793e697528fcc8ebb1d4efae
BLAKE2b: faf10846bf53a32c2b8f5ded27396a1c6245bb9030f0192a7fc4957db5611bd3
MD5: 54e965d278c5fd938a3c49db75dd966a
�� TITLE HASHES:
SHA-256: d922180320715718d6c732041e2aa6c6919899a034e6f1fee397ffebc02c38fc
BLAKE2b: f35606022a024421f3b798501117974acb2d16eacafab3724e4c98efc27a7894
MD5: 2f0f1580b92ba56621575eef426129f9
�� INTEGRITY HASHES:
SHA-256: 160e26dcb0e1bea7e1fba37df7f52d87de4de689f0798f85672a0a05c0bcc459
BLAKE2b: 71c403c4288fb32222c88d2227f817565040cbb59db19a723682425627a46e36
MD5: a1ca043a778b5d4f34899dc782995b5d
Archived with ArcHive - Client-side cryptographic archival system