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Added on the 03/05/2015 19:14:28 - Copyright : Reuters EN
Izmir (Turkey), 2 Nov (EFE), (Camera: Lara Villalón).- Rescue teams are asking for silence again and for the excavators to stop. They are exhausted after days of work since the earthquake that struck the Turkish city of Izmir on Friday, but are still looking for signs of life under the rubble, in an effort that, surprisingly, is still sometimes rewarded.FOOTAGE OF RESCUE TEAMS WORKING IN TURKEY
Images show the rubble of houses destroyed in the 5.6-magnitude earthquake that killed at least 132 people in Nepal. The quake hit the far west of the Himalayan country and was measured by the US Geological Survey at just 18 kilometres (11 miles) deep. IMAGES
Animated map showing the epicenter of the earthquake that hit Nepal late Friday. At least 56 people were killed when the quake hit the far west of the Himalayan country, according to officials. The tremor was measured by the US Geological Survey at just 18 kilometres (11 miles) deep. IMAGES
People walk amid rubble in an alleyway in the Jewish quarter of the Marrakesh medina, following Morocco's deadliest earthquake in decades. The quake killed at least 2,122 people, injured more than 2,400 others, and flattened entire villages. IMAGES
Ciudad Juarez, Jul 3 (EFE).- Dozens of people gathered Saturday in the sand dunes of Samalyuca, near Ciudad Juárez, on the border with the United States, to sow "hope" amid the Covid-19 pandemic, which has made Mexico the fourth country with the most deaths in the world.The yoga meeting in the dunes has been held annually since 2015, but it was canceled last year due to the pandemic, and resumed Saturday. (Camera: RAUL MORALES).SHOT LST: PEOPLE GATHER TO DO YOGA IN THE SAND DUNES OF SAMALYUCA, NEAR CIUDAD JUAREZ, MEXICO.