Get you up to speed: Venezuela quake death toll tops 5,000 as IMF releases emergency aid
The death toll from the twin earthquakes that struck Venezuela’s Caribbean coast on June 24 has risen to 5,069, with the majority of fatalities occurring in La Guaira. Authorities continue recovery efforts amid reports of over 16,740 injuries and approximately 20,000 people displaced.
Rescue efforts in Venezuela faced significant delays due to late military deployment orders and equipment shortages. The primary investigation into the response continues amid growing public criticism of the government’s handling of the disaster.
Interim President Delcy Rodriguez announced that Venezuela secured $346 million in emergency financing from the International Monetary Fund to address urgent humanitarian needs following the earthquakes. Public outrage has intensified over the government’s response, with survivors accusing authorities of delayed action and mismanagement during critical rescue efforts.
What remains unclear — The extent of the delays and confusion in the initial rescue efforts remains unverified amidst conflicting reports from military and diplomatic sources.
Venezuela quake death toll exceeds 5,000 as IMF approves emergency aid
News|EarthquakesVenezuela quake death toll tops 5,000 as IMF releases emergency aid
IMF releases $346m in emergency funds as new details emerge about the disaster response.
Published On 18 Jul 202618 Jul 2026
The death toll from the twin earthquakes that tore through Venezuela’s Caribbean coast last month has surpassed 5,000, as authorities continue recovering bodies from the rubble.
National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez said on Friday that 5,069 people have now been confirmed dead, most of them in the coastal state of La Guaira, where the earthquakes caused the worst destruction. Another 16,740 people were injured, though Rodriguez said most have since been discharged from hospital.
The toll has continued to climb as rescue crews clear collapsed buildings and reach areas that were difficult to access in the chaotic days after the disaster.
The magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes, which struck within a minute of each other on June 24, devastated La Guaira, north of Caracas. The coastal state is home to Venezuela’s main international airport, a major seaport and hundreds of apartment towers, many of which partially or completely collapsed.
More than 1,300 aftershocks have been recorded since then, authorities say. Approximately 20,000 people remain displaced, many living in overcrowded shelters without reliable access to clean water or sanitation.
$346m in IMF financing
The grim milestone comes as Interim President Delcy Rodriguez announced on Friday that Venezuela had secured $346m in emergency financing from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva confirmed the money was being released from Venezuela’s reserve tranche at the fund to meet urgent humanitarian needs.
It was only in April that the IMF and World Bank restored relations with Venezuela, following the United States forcibly removing former President Nicolas Maduro from power in January. The institutions had suspended ties with the country in 2019 after refusing to recognise Maduro’s government.
Public outrage over the government’s handling of the earthquakes has continued to grow in the weeks since they struck, with survivors and critics accusing authorities of responding too slowly as people remained trapped beneath collapsed buildings.
New details uncovered by the news agency Reuters have added to those questions. In an investigation published on Saturday, the news agency found the crucial first days of the rescue effort were hampered by delayed military deployment orders, shortages of basic rescue equipment and confusion caused by overlapping chains of command, according to military and diplomatic sources.
Rodriguez has repeatedly rejected accusations that authorities were slow to act, dismissing claims of chaos as a narrative manufactured by “media laboratories” and insisting the government responded swiftly.












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