Julio Sanchez, spokesman for Guatemala's volunteer firefighters, told a news conference yesterday that the death toll will likely continue to rise as emergency crews dig through tons of earth that buried an estimated 125 homes Thursday night. The previous number of confirmed dead had been 30 with up to 600 people believed missing.
"We still have hope of finding people alive if we keep searching," said emergency services coordinator, Sergio Cabanas.
"We're from the rescue unit," one worker announced. "If there is someone there, please make some noise or yell."
When no response was heard, two more long whistles sounded, a sign that the workers should continue digging.
Cabanas said he had been contacted by several people who reported receiving messages on their cell phones from family members trapped under the rubble. He said authorities had not seen the reported text messages, but had asked local telephone companies to try to map out the places where the messages were sent from.
Gonzalez said he was working at his job at a McDonald's restaurant when the landslide occurred. He said he usually left work at 11 pm, but that day he was given extra chores and didn't leave until 4 a.M. Friday. It wasn't until then that he learned about the disaster.
"The last thing she said when I called her on the telephone in the afternoon was that she loved me," Gonzalez said, looking down at the ground. "I love her, too."
The dead were being brought to an improvised morgue where weeping relatives identified the bodies. The dead included Quani Bonilla, 18, who played on the national squash team.
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