The president of the Venezuelan National Assembly said the death toll from the country's catastrophic earthquake has risen to 3,811, according to a report from Israel's Channel 12. The figure is a further increase over earlier official counts.
The death toll from the catastrophic earthquake that struck Venezuela has risen to 3,811, according to a report from Israel's Channel 12 citing the president of the Venezuelan National Assembly. The new figure, reported overnight, marks a further increase from the previous official count of 3,685 that The Zioneer reported on Thursday, June 25 at 20:43 Jerusalem, based on a report from Ynet.
That earlier figure was the latest in a rapid succession of escalating tolls that The Zioneer tracked throughout the evening of June 25: from 2,595 to 2,645 to 2,954 to 3,342 to 3,535, and finally to 3,685. The initial reports came from Israeli media outlets citing Venezuelan officials, including the information ministry, and later from the ministry directly. The new update shifts the source to the legislative branch, adding a second official channel to the tally.
As The Zioneer reported in its wider coverage, the UN was preparing for as many as 10,000 fatalities as of June 29, and the number of missing was cited at 68,900 in unverified reports on June 28. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro declared a week of national mourning on July 1. The disaster has also been reported to have killed at least 28 Portuguese nationals or descendants, according to a statement from Portugal on June 27.
The new figure of 3,811 has not been independently verified by a separate authority. The number of missing remains unclear, and the full extent of casualties is still being assessed as rescue and recovery operations continue.
7 developments
- ConfirmedUN reportedly preparing for up to 10,000 dead in Venezuela earthquake; missing count climbs to 46,000
- DevelopingPortugal says 28 Portuguese nationals or descendants killed in Venezuela earthquakes
- DevelopingVenezuela: reports claim 68,900 still missing after earthquakes
- StrongVenezuela resident describes building collapse, ongoing rescues after quake
Source and signal
- Internal intake
