Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
Chilean rescuers allege military harassment in Venezuela's quake zone
international

Chilean rescuers allege military harassment in Venezuela's quake zone

MercoPress · Jun 30, 2026, 10:08 PM · Also reported by 4 other sources

Key takeaways

  • The Venezuelan authorities have not commented on the accusations.
  • He described an episode in which a soldier entered the area where his personnel were digging tunnels through the rubble to ask for documentation from specialists already identified on previous days.
  • Even so, he avoided giving a political color to his remarks and stressed that the country is battered by the scale of the disaster.

Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.

The leader of the Topos Chile rescue group, Francisco Lermanda, alleged that his teams deployed in the Venezuelan state of La Guaira have been harassed by soldiers during search operations in the area hardest hit by the June 24 twin earthquake, which according to the official toll has left at least 1,943 dead. The Venezuelan authorities have not commented on the accusations.

According to Lermanda's account to Venezuelan and Chilean media, soldiers have repeatedly demanded identity documents from his 46 rescuers, on suspicion of espionage, and at times have prevented them from re-entering the work area after stepping out, for example, to charge their phones. He described an episode in which a soldier entered the area where his personnel were digging tunnels through the rubble to ask for documentation from specialists already identified on previous days. According to his account, when one of the rescuers protested, a soldier replied that they had orders to check them periodically because they could be spies for the United States or Chile.

Lermanda also said that, while his team was trying to rescue a 14-year-old with crush syndrome —a condition requiring urgent medical assessment before extraction— a soldier took a phone they were using for a video call with a doctor, deeming it possible espionage. The rescuer called on the government of acting President Delcy Rodr guez and the armed forces to abandon what he described as a paranoid attitude, referring, he said, to one officer's fear that the emergency might be used to promote a coup. Even so, he avoided giving a political color to his remarks and stressed that the country is battered by the scale of the disaster.

Article preview — originally published by MercoPress. Full story at the source.
Read full story on MercoPress → More top stories

Also covered by

Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from MercoPress alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop