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Guatemala volcano death toll soars to 62, as rescuers scour smouldering landscape

‘It is very difficult for us to identify them because some of the dead lost their features or their fingerprints’

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A police officer stumbles while running away from a new pyroclastic flow spewed by the Fuego volcano in the community of San Miguel Los Lotes in Escuintla, Guatemala, on Monday. Photo: Reuters

Rescuers pulled survivors and bodies Monday from the charred aftermath of the powerful eruption of Guatemala’s Volcano of Fire, as the death toll rose to 62 in a disaster that caught residents of remote villages off guard, with little or no time to flee.

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The death toll is expected to rise.

Using shovels and backhoes, emergency workers dug through the debris and mud, perilous labour on smouldering terrain still hot enough to melt shoe soles, a day after the volcano exploded in a hail of ash, smoke and molten rock.
Boris Rodriguez, 24, who is searching for his wife, cries after seeing the condition of his neighbourhood, destroyed by the erupting Volcan de Fuego in Escuintla, Guatemala, on Monday. Photo: AP
Boris Rodriguez, 24, who is searching for his wife, cries after seeing the condition of his neighbourhood, destroyed by the erupting Volcan de Fuego in Escuintla, Guatemala, on Monday. Photo: AP
Damage caused by the eruption of the Fuego Volcano in San Miguel Los Lotes. Photo: Agence France-Presse
Damage caused by the eruption of the Fuego Volcano in San Miguel Los Lotes. Photo: Agence France-Presse

Bodies were so thickly coated with ash that they looked like statues, and rescuers were forced to use sledgehammers to break through the roofs of houses buried in debris up to their rooflines to try to see if anyone was trapped inside.

Fanuel Garcia, director of the National Institute of Forensic Sciences, said 62 bodies had been recovered and 13 of those had been identified.

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“It is very difficult for us to identify them because some of the dead lost their features or their fingerprints” from the red-hot flows, Garcia said. “We are going to have to resort to other methods … and if possible take DNA samples to identify them.”

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