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Magnitude-5.5 quake rattles Venezuela before dawn

A firefighter walks in front of a house in Valencia, Venezuela, that was damaged during an earthquake on Dec. 27.
A firefighter walks in front of a house in Valencia, Venezuela, that was damaged during an earthquake on Dec. 27.
(Juan Carlos Hernandez / AFP/Getty Images)
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A strong earthquake jolted Venezuelans from their sleep early Thursday, forcing residents in the capital to evacuate buildings in their pajamas before sunrise. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

The magnitude-5.5 quake struck just before 2 a.m. PST at a depth of 6 miles. It was centered near the town of San Diego, 100 miles west of Caracas, the capital, and was felt across seven states, along with a magnitude-5.0 aftershock a few minutes later.

Interior Minister Nestor Reverol said there was no major damage or casualties. Photos on social media showed large cracks in some buildings and fallen walls and debris from historic facades in San Diego, a suburb of Venezuela’s third-largest city, Valencia.

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Though earthquakes are common in Venezuela, they tend to be less frequent and not as strong as those that hit elsewhere in South America, such as neighboring Colombia, Chile and Peru.

Daniel Salazar said she ran nervously from bed in search of her 76-year-old mother and found her standing next to their Christmas tree, which was swaying back and forth.

“My entire body is shaking, I’m not sure if from the cold or the scare we experienced,” said Salazar, who was standing outside her high-rise Caracas apartment before dawn.

The quake follows a magnitude-7.3 earthquake in August — the country’s strongest in more than a century — that rattled residents across Venezuela and was felt as far away as in neighboring Colombia and Guyana.

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