In Cuba, research continues under the rubble of the hotel

Four days following the accidental gas explosion that blew up Havana’s iconic Saratoga hotel, killing at least 42 people, Cuban rescue workers continued to search through the rubble on Tuesday.

“It’s sad because there are a large number of deaths,” “and also because there are children,” laments actor Teheran Aguilar, 46.

Popular on the island for the television series “Stories of Fire”, where he plays the role of a firefighter, the actor has been working for several days at the site of the explosion as a volunteer firefighter, wearing a white helmet and a black jumpsuit and yellow.

Not far from him, Edel Llopiz, 48, hugs Yomy, his rescue dog, a 12-year-old Labrador. “I made my contribution, with my dog, who played a big role in this battle and in the face of this pain for our country”, he testifies.

“I hope that the country will recover, that we will recover, yes I am sure of it”, says this specialist in canine techniques.

Despite his experience in a forensic medicine service, Raul Leon, 53, remains shaken by the tragedy: “It’s shocking, because I’ve never seen anything like it, but hey, we’re here, trying to do as best we can, to support families so that they can find their loved ones”.

Friday morning, the luxury hotel in Old Havana was in the final preparations before its reopening scheduled for Tuesday, following works and two years of closure due to the pandemic. Fifty employees were on site. A tank truck carried out the gas supply.

Suddenly a loud explosion and a thick cloud of smoke: the first four floors flew to pieces.

“This explosion is the strongest I have felt in my entire life. I am still in a state of shock,” says Maria Victoria Salomon, 60, a teacher at a school near Saratoga.

With a broken voice and watery eyes, Nairobi Evora, 36, has spent the past few days coordinating the ambulances responsible for carrying the injured to the various hospitals.

“It touches me closely, because my mother worked for many years here (at the Saratoga hotel, editor’s note). Many of his colleagues are dead, and I’m here trying to contribute. We mightn’t save them all, but we saved a lot of them.

With his Red Cross uniform, Inti Guevara, 50, is also tired following these long days of work, but remains determined.

“I will stay here until the last moment, until they say there are no more victims” under the rubble. “It’s my hope that even if this is the last (person to be rescued from the rubble), that they are rescued alive.”

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