Put Hari, who kills! Youth rescued in Venezuela after eight days under 140 tons of rubble in the earthquake

Such events should be called ‘Rakhe Hari, Marre Ke’. 43-year-old Hernán Alberta Gil Flores was buried under 140 tons of rubble in the devastating earthquake in Venezuela. There was no way he was going to survive. Eight days had passed since the incident, even though rescue operations continued. Hernan’s family members also assumed that he had died of suffocation or lack of food and water, even if he had not been buried. Only the members of the rescue team did not want to give up. They left after seeing the end. Finally a miracle happened. Harnan was rescued alive after 100 hours of continuous efforts. Many people say that not only rakhe hari mare, such a phenomenon can also be called reincarnation.

On June 24, two very powerful earthquakes of magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 occurred in Venezuela within a few seconds. About three thousand people died. Fifty thousand citizens of the country are still missing. A shopping mall collapsed in that earthquake. Hernan Alberta Gil Flores was buried under him before he knew anything. Since then the rescue operation started. However, the main earthquake was followed by a series of ‘aftershocks’ which increased the danger. This made it more difficult to get inside the 140 ton wreckage. Besides, it has been raining continuously for the past few days. Hernan had a one percent chance of survival in this condition.

However, the rescue team got the ‘reward’ for not giving up. Needless to say, that ‘prize’ is Harnan’s life. The video of Harnan being pulled out of the rubble after eight days has gone viral on social media. It was seen there that Harnan, covered in dust, wearing an oxygen mask on his face, was being taken out on a stretcher. He was surrounded by rescue workers wearing helmets. He was rushed to the hospital by ambulance. Representatives from around the world, led by the Red Cross, cheered as they were loaded into ambulances. But what is Harnan saying? Is he in a position to speak?

“When we found Hernán, he begged us not to tell his wife that he was alive, lest he end up alive,” Miniar Collado, a Costa Rican rescue worker with the Red Cross, told reporters. If not, give up and lose! “There was no way we would have left him here,” Collado added. The voice of Costa Rican rescue workers is a victory song for world humanity.

Comments are closed.