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Survivor pulled from rubble eight days after Venezuela earthquakes
To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Watch: Man rescued from rubble eight days after Venezuela earthquake By Nicole Kolster , BBC Mundo contributor in Catia La Mar  and  Vanessa Buschschlüter , Latin America online editor Published 2 July 2026, 12:31 BST Updated 3 hours ago A man has been rescued alive after being trapped for eight days in the rubble of a building that collapsed after twin earthquakes in Venezuela. Emergency workers managed to free Hernán Gil more than 100 hours after they had first located him under 140 tonnes of rubble. A Chilean firefighter had earlier described the rescue operation as "without doubt the most complex and technically difficult which I've had to tackle". Almost 2,300 people are confirmed to have died in the quakes which hit Venezuela on 24 June, and tens of thousands are still missing. Image source, AP Image caption, Rescuers spent more than 100 hours inching closer to Gil before they were finally able to rescue him Allan Madrigal, a paramedic with the Costa Rican Red Cross, told journalists at the site that Gil had "emerged just perfect" from the ordeal. Madrigal is the rescuer who heard Gil's faint cries for help emerging from the rubble on Sunday. "It was an emotional moment," he recalled, explaining that at first he had not trusted his own ears and asked a colleague to confirm that he "wasn't just imagining it". From that moment on, rescuers raced to try and dig the security guard out. Gil had been on duty in a small concrete booth in the basement of the parking lot adjacent to the Galerias Playa Grande mall in Catia La Mar when the twin quakes struck. It appears that the booth created a shell around him, protecting him from the 140 tonnes of rubble which collapsed around and on top of him. "He has told us that he does not even have a crushed nail," another Costa Rican Red Cross worker said shortly before Gil was pulled from the rubble. Gil had been given water and medics had attached him to an intravenous drip while teams from Venezuela, Chile, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, Portugal and the United States worked to free him. Parts of the access ducts rescuers built to reach him collapsed several times, highlighting the dangers the work posed to the rescuers as well as Gil. Overnight, the search teams were finally able to establish visual contact with the survivor. In footage recorded by a small camera inserted into the rubble where Gil was trapped, a Chilean firefighter could be heard asking him to turn his head towards the camera. To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, International rescuers monitor man trapped under the rubble One of his eyes was bloodshot and he was wearing a face mask, which rescuers had earlier passed to him through a small hole to protect him from the dust and debris created by their efforts to free him. The firefighter also asked hi