Mexico Update: Young Girl is Rescued From Her Collapsed School
The Los Topos search and rescue team have rescued 26 from the Mexico earthquake. "We need more time to finish this work," they say.
MEXICO CITY, Sept. 22, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- In the early hours of the morning September 21, after working 36 hours nonstop to save her life, Los Topos rescued the tiny Paulina Gomez from the Enrique Rebsamen School where she was buried alive on Tuesday when the 7.1 magnitude earthquake struck Mexico City.
Los Topos worked inch by inch, removing one stone at a time, to free Paulina from the school that pancaked from the impact of the quake. The very act of digging her out was liable to cause it to collapse further.
On top, rescue workers waited for hours to help. From time to time throughout the day and night and into the following day, someone would raise his fist, calling for silence. This was the recognized signal for all talking to cease, making it possible for the Topos to listen for movement inside the collapsed building to locate survivors.
Then, at last, rescuers received the message to start pulling on the cable to bring the little girl up. To the cadence "Dos, tres (two, three).… dos, tres..."— the top of a child-sized white hard hat appeared. "Dos, tres.…" and the child was free. A roar erupted as she emerged from the bowels of the building, her little hands holding onto the cable used to haul her up and out.
Paulina is one of the 26 victims Los Topos has pulled alive from the earthquake, one of three at the Enrique Rebsamen School, where they also rescued her schoolmates, Isaac Ayala and Lucia Samora.
Los Topos has put out a plea to the government to allow them and other trained rescue workers to continue searching for victims. The government announced that as of 5 p.m. local time the search for survivors would end and heavy equipment would be deployed to excavate for the dead. The Topos warn that this kind of equipment causes landslides, greatly reducing the chances of saving any other lives.
The death toll is now at 274 and Los Topos claims there are 45 locations around the city where people are trapped and could still be rescued. They hold that far from being over, the search and rescue phase must carry on. Los Topos rescued one woman eight days after the building she was trapped under collapsed in the 2010 Haiti earthquake. And they pulled someone out of the rubble alive in Japan nine days after that country's 2011 earthquake.
Ironically, it was exactly 32 years earlier, on Sept. 19, 1985, that an 8.0 magnitude earthquake struck Mexico City killing some 6,000. That was the day Los Topos Azteca was born. Founder Héctor Méndez raced to the center of the disaster to search for his brother. It turned out his brother was fine, but in searching for him, Méndez dug four survivors out of the rubble that day. Since then, he and his Topos, manned by men and women who work strictly as volunteers, have served in disasters the world over.
Los Topos partners with the Scientology Volunteer Ministers who provide them logistical support at disaster sites. When the earthquake struck on Tuesday, Los Topos designated the Church of Scientology Mexico as their headquarters for this relief operation.
To see a video of the rescue of Paulina Gomez, visit the Scientology newsroom.
For more information, contact the Church of Scientology Public Affairs Office at [email protected] or call (323) 960-3500.
Related Images
image1.jpg
Rescue workers stand by to help at Enrique Rebsamen School, waiting for word about Paulina Gomez, one of the children trapped under the rubble.
image2.jpg
Fists held high—the sign for "silence" so Los Topos can listen for movement to locate the child
Related Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJ3wFWVwvB0
SOURCE ScientologyNews.org
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