The disaster coincides with the anniversary of a deadly 1985 earthquake which shook central Mexico. Tuesday’s quake struck at 1:14 p.m. Just hours after a siren signaled an annual earthquake drill in Mexico City, the ground began to shake, walls buckled and residents fled into the streets. There were reports of fires and gas leaks.
Governor Graco Ramirez tweeted that at least 42 people were killed in the state of Morelos, south of Mexico City. At least five more people died in the state of Mexico, which surrounds the capital, according to media reports quoting its governor, Alfredo del Mazo. Two others died in the central state of Puebla after a school collapsed, said Fernando Clemente, a civil protection official in the state, Reuters reported.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the epicenter of the quake was 76 miles southeast of the capital, near the town of Raboso in Puebla.
Photos showed collapsed buildings in Mexico City. It also showed emergency workers in yellow hard hats as they scrambled over mountains of debris — twisted metal beams, chunks of plaster and broken glass — where structures had once stood. Cars were nearly buried in rubble. Residents were seen embracing and crying in the streets after they raced out of their homes.
At the Clínica Gabriel Mancera in Mexico City, more than a dozen hospital beds had been set up in the patio outside as a triage center for the injured. Leticia Gonzalez, a 45-year-old maid in a nearby apartment building, said that she tried to race out of the building but that concrete crashed down as she fled. Her right leg was wrapped in a bandage as she grimaced in pain outside the hospital.
"We were all running like crazy," she said. "This was the worst earthquake I've ever seen."
Marisela Avila Gomez, 58, was in her apartment in the central Narvarte neighborhood in the capital when the shaking began, toppling her furniture and shattering the windows. A piece of glass sliced deep into her right leg.
I lost about three liters of blood," she said. "My whole house is full of blood."
Her husband, Francisco Vicente Lozada Garcia, a 55-year-old landscaper, tried to drive across town to get to his wife, but traffic was snarled and the "street felt like gelatin."
The couple eventually made it to the Clinica Gabriel Mancera, where Avila Gomez was treated.
"I'm afraid to return home but I don't have anywhere else to go," she said. "I'm afraid of aftershocks."
Classes were suspended at schools in a large swath of central Mexico. Patients were evacuated from damaged hospitals. The Mexico City airport was closed as authorities looked for damage. In the southern Mexico City neighborhood of Coyoacan, the walls of colonial-era buildings cracked and sagged, with some collapsing into rubble. At the Barricas Don Tiburcio shop, shelves bearing food crashed down and wine bottles shattered on the floors.
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