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With exhausted emergency workers still reporting signs of life at several spots in Mexico City, the head of the national disaster management agency, Luis Felipe Puente, warned the coming hours would be critical.
“Tonight will be tough, because a lot of time has passed (since Tuesday’s quake). But we won’t give up,” he said.
“Time has gotten the best of us. There are structures that are very complicated to access. But we’re going to keep fighting for the families” of those feared trapped inside, he told TV network Televisa.
He said the authorities would not bring in the bulldozers to start clean-up until they were certain no survivors or even bodies remained.
The 72-hour-mark expired at 1:14 pm (1814 GMT) Friday.
Three days is the limit that experts say people trapped in rubble without water, often with crushed limbs, can hold on.
Families clung to hope as they watched rescue teams painstakingly work through the jumbled wreckage.
But psychologists dispatched to the scene were already preparing to help relatives deal with tragic news.
“The families are still hopeful, but we psychologists are starting to prepare ourselves to counsel them in the context of mourning,” said Penelope Exzacarias, who was on standby at a collapsed office building in Mexico City’s trendy Roma neighborhood.
Some 70 people were at work in the building when the 7.1-magnitude earthquake struck. Only 28 have made it out alive so far — all in the first hours.
But Mexicans remember “miracle” rescues a week after a 1985 quake that killed more than 10,000 people in the capital.
The government’s open-ended extension on rescue efforts posed a dilemma for emergency workers in the ruins of a clothing factory, just one of nearly 40 collapsed buildings in the capital.
Continue, but how long?
“There are no indications of anyone inside but they’re not sure enough to affirm there’s really no one. The camera used doesn’t allow a full view,” explained Daniel Quiroz, a 22-year-old volunteer.
So far, 115 people have been pulled alive from the rubble, according to the military.
– Till death do us part –
In all likelihood, the death toll will rise above the latest figure of 295.
Mexico City recorded the highest number of fatalities: 157, with more bodies certain to be found.
The rest of the deaths occurred in the states of Morelos, Mexico, Puebla, Guerrero and Oaxaca.
The toll includes eight foreigners: four Taiwanese, a Korean, a Spaniard, a Panamanian and an Argentine, authorities said.
Several countries, including the United States, Israel, Panama and EU states have sent crews to help the rescue effort.
A Japanese team was using a hi-tech scanner on the toppled building in the Roma district.
Jose Gutierrez, father of one of those trapped, and also a civil engineer, warned that “the structure is at risk of total collapse.”
Overnight rain caused saturated debris to become heavier and shift, he said.
In the south of Mexico City, at a flattened school where 19 children died, white wreaths lay out, testimony to the mourning of relatives and neighbors.
Families were starting to hold funerals. One of the first was that of Gabriel Morales and Agueda Mendoza, a married couple found locked in embrace under the rubble along with their dog Quino.
“I remember them as such a united, loving couple,” said Juan Carlos Williams, their nephew.
– Children in the streets –
Charity group Save the Children said 100,000 children in Mexico City were affected by the quake, with hundreds of them left to sleep in the streets and parks despite around 50 shelters being opened.
Many adults wondered where they and their families would live after the quake damaged more than 2,000 homes — most of which were uninsured.
“I’m waiting for the civil protection service to tell me if we can go home,” said street vendor Erika Albarran, who has been staying with her family in a shelter.
Her family has only 100 pesos ($5.50) and she doesn’t know how they will manage once assistance such as food, shelter and baby supplies runs out.
“We’re living day to day,” she said.
Tuesday’s tragedy struck on the anniversary of the 1985 quake, just two hours after the country held an annual earthquake drill.
“The city isn’t prepared for a disaster like this, but I think the people are ready to react, they remember 1985 and obviously reacted in time,” Mexican actor Diego Luna told AFP at an emergency supply center.
He and fellow Hollywood heartthrob Gael Garcia Bernal, also Mexican, have launched a fund-raising drive to help the recovery effort.
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