A boy is held by his mother in front of a mountain of rubble in Venezuela. He is looking directly at the camera, has short brown hair and wears a red t-shirt and blue trousers. He is being carried by his mother, who is looking away towards the rubble behind them. She has curly dyed blonde hair and wears a black t-shirt.Image source, AFP via Getty Images
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Two powerful earthquakes struck Venezuela on 25 June

ByMaia Davies

The UK’s Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) has launched an appeal to help the thousands of people injured and displaced by Venezuela’s powerful twin earthquakes.

Fifteen UK aid agencies including the British Red Cross, Oxfam and Save the Children have come together to ask the public to donate.

More than 1,700 people have died since the earthquakes struck within seconds of each other last Wednesday, a figure the United Nations (UN) has said will “unavoidably” rise. Tens of thousands of people are still believed to be missing.

The charities said funds were required to deliver aid to survivors who “urgently need shelter, food and water”.

Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodríguez has called the earthquakes the “most brutal natural catastrophe” in the country’s history.

At least 5,000 people have been injured since the magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 quakes struck near the capital Caracas, reducing hundreds of buildings to rubble and prompting officials to declare a state of emergency.

Hospitals have been overwhelmed by a shortage of critical supplies and demand for aid has surged among those who have been rendered homeless.

Some 2,500 buildings have been affected, the majority of which have completely collapsed, according to the UN’s humanitarian coordinator in Venezuela.

Several countries including the UK have deployed search and rescue teams to try to reach survivors, as well as medical and humanitarian personnel.

Residents in some devastated areas have been left to conduct much of the search operation themselves in the absence of significant government support.

Both the UN and the US Geological Survey have projected that the death toll could reach 10,000.

Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said the money raised by the appeal would be matched by the government up to £2m.

“The people of Venezuela desperately need urgent humanitarian support from across the globe,” she said.

The DEC, external brings 15 leading UK aid charities together to provide and deliver aid.

The appeal will be broadcast on the BBC and other media on Wednesday.

  • Dayana Patino looks down at her son Juan David smiling from a hospital bed Caracas. Both mother and baby have injuries on their faces
  • Deilisbeth Herreira stands looking at the camera with a T-shirt on her head and a face mask resting over her chin. She is holding up a photo of her daughters on a phone.
  • Map of northern Venezuela showing a large red concentric-circle marker indicating an earthquake epicentre near the north coast, west of Caracas. The capital city Caracas is labelled with a black dot to the east, and the label “Venezuela” appears across the map.

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