
Venezuela's twin earthquakes have claimed 3,811 lives, with 16,740 injured and nearly 18,000 left homeless, according to figures released Wednesday by National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez. The June 24 quakes, which struck 16 days ago, collapsed 190 buildings and damaged 856 others, leaving survivors facing cascading health crises as aid workers struggle to meet surging demand.
Chronic Illness and Disease Surge
Crowded displacement sites and deteriorating sanitation conditions have triggered outbreaks of diarrheal diseases and skin conditions in quake-hit communities, particularly in Catia La Mar. Doctors there report mounting requests for medications to treat chronic illnesses including diabetes and high blood pressure. These emerging health threats stem from conditions that predated the earthquakes but have worsened dramatically in their aftermath.
Irma Echarri, 67, arrived at a mobile unit clutching boxes of eyedrops and pain reliever, hoping for replacements and treatment for nose pain from the earthquakes. "It hurts a lot," she said. "It hurts because it hurts." Zulbey Reyes, 41, sought treatment at a clinic run by Venezuela-based organization Paluz in partnership with the International Rescue Committee after losing her job as a nanny. She'd been experiencing chest pain. "I thought it was my heart that was sick," she said. "But it's a nerve that became inflamed after the screams that day."
United Nations relief chief Tom Fletcher said people are now arriving at displacement sites with longer-term health needs beyond initial injuries. "It is clear at displacement sites that, particularly after two weeks, that people are turning up because they haven't been able to get their other treatments," he said. "So, they're not turning up with just the fractures now, they're turning up with those longer-term health needs. And it's vital that we're there for them."
Healthcare System Under Strain
The crisis has devastated La Guaira's healthcare workforce. Armando Denegri, representative in Venezuela of the Pan-American Health Organization, said "50% of the health professionals in La Guaira were directly affected" by the earthquakes. "Some disappeared, some died, others were severely affected by the crisis, impacting their families," he said, without providing further details.
Mobile kitchens, clinics and field hospitals have been established in public spaces, with nongovernmental organizations delivering much of the aid. The widespread presence of these organizations and the government's willingness to allow them to operate freely contrasts sharply with recent years, when they faced repeated accusations of anti-government activities and the U.N. local human rights office was expelled.
International Aid and Sanctions Relief
The United Nations has launched an appeal for roughly $300 million to assist 1.3 million people in urgent need. Fletcher said the United States had provided most of the earthquake-response aid so far. The U.S. authorized for four months transactions related to earthquake relief that would otherwise have been banned by sanctions imposed over allegations of anti-democratic activity and drug trafficking.
Acting President Delcy Rodríguez renewed calls for international sanctions to be lifted entirely, arguing Venezuela has sufficient overseas assets to finance reconstruction if blocked accounts were released. "Venezuela has resources blocked around the world that could address this process of reconstruction," she said on state television channel VTV, adding that funds were needed for employment and education programs. She said she'd sent a letter to King Charles requesting release of Venezuelan gold held at the Bank of England and had spoken with the International Monetary Fund about releasing funds. The Bank of England has refused to release some 31 tons of Venezuelan gold held in its vaults, which has been the subject of a long-running legal battle in British courts.
Debt Restructuring Push Amid Crisis
Venezuela is pursuing a rapid and complex debt restructuring in the wake of the disaster, with claims approaching $200 billion. The push has raised concerns about future financial stability as the country grapples with immediate humanitarian needs. The United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction has estimated direct physical damage to housing and infrastructure at around $37 billion.
Why This Matters:
The compounding health crisis in Venezuela reveals how natural disasters disproportionately harm communities already struggling with inadequate infrastructure and healthcare access. When half of La Guaira's health professionals are themselves victims, the system's capacity to respond collapses precisely when it's needed most. The surge in chronic illness cases shows how displacement doesn't just create immediate injuries—it severs people from ongoing medical care that keeps them alive. The government's call for sanctions relief and asset releases highlights the tension between geopolitical restrictions and humanitarian necessity when disaster strikes. With $37 billion in estimated damage and nearly 18,000 people homeless, the question isn't just about emergency aid—it's about whether international financial systems can be responsive enough to prevent a reconstruction crisis from becoming a long-term humanitarian catastrophe. The presence of NGOs operating freely, after years of repression, suggests even authoritarian governments must sometimes choose between ideology and survival when their people are suffering at this scale.