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Mexico Quake Leaves Thousands Stranded Without a Home


FILE - Tomasa Mozo, 69, a housewife, looks up at the roof inside the ruins of her house after an earthquake in San Jose Platanar, at the epicenter zone, Mexico, Sept. 28, 2017.
FILE - Tomasa Mozo, 69, a housewife, looks up at the roof inside the ruins of her house after an earthquake in San Jose Platanar, at the epicenter zone, Mexico, Sept. 28, 2017.

Rubble is all that remains of hundreds of houses rent asunder by the earthquake that struck Mexico in September, leaving owners lodging with relatives or friends, hoping their homes can be rebuilt or they can find new ones.

At least 369 people died in the 7.1 magnitude quake that hit central Mexico, causing more devastation in the capital than any since the 1985 disaster that killed thousands.

Damage to housing was particularly striking in central areas of the country close to the epicenter of the quake southeast of Mexico City in the states of Puebla and Morelos.

Some houses were simply flattened by the shuddering tectonic shift which the government and the private sector estimated caused billions of dollars of damage.

FILE - Ana Maria Hernandez, 37, a clothing salesperson, stands outside her house as it is demolished after an earthquake in Jojutla de Juarez, Mexico, Sept. 30, 2017.
FILE - Ana Maria Hernandez, 37, a clothing salesperson, stands outside her house as it is demolished after an earthquake in Jojutla de Juarez, Mexico, Sept. 30, 2017.

"I lost everything. My aunt died here," said Ana Maria Hernandez, 37, a clothing salesperson, as diggers cleared away the wreckage of her home in Jojutla de Juarez, Morelos.

Now living with relatives, she and many others hope their destroyed homes will eventually be rebuilt.

But uncertainty clouds the future for some.

Veronica Dircio, a 34-year-old housewife said "nothing was left" of the house she and her children called home before the earthquake hammered the town of San Juan Pilcaya in Puebla.

FILE - Veronica Dircio, 34, a housewife, stands with her sons in front of a tent in a neighbor's backyard after an earthquake in San Juan Pilcaya, at the epicenter zone, Mexico, Sept. 28, 2017.
FILE - Veronica Dircio, 34, a housewife, stands with her sons in front of a tent in a neighbor's backyard after an earthquake in San Juan Pilcaya, at the epicenter zone, Mexico, Sept. 28, 2017.

"We're worried because they came and did a census of the homes; and whether it's a big house or a small house, they haven't told us if we're at least going to be able to get back a bit of what was once our house," Dircio said.

Thousands of homes were damaged or destroyed in the quake, which followed another major tremor in the southwest of Mexico two weeks earlier that displaced thousands of people.

Maria Trinidad Gonzalez, 41, managed to salvage some cooking utensils and furniture from the ruins of her home in the small town of Tepalcingo in Morelos. Mounds of fallen bricks and churned up debris covered the floor of her roofless house.

FILE - Maria Guzman, 70, a housewife, stands amid the rubble of her house after an earthquake in San Jose Platanar, at the epicenter zone, Mexico, Sept. 28, 2017.
FILE - Maria Guzman, 70, a housewife, stands amid the rubble of her house after an earthquake in San Jose Platanar, at the epicenter zone, Mexico, Sept. 28, 2017.

With its walls pulled down and the contents strewn outdoors, the house of 70-year-old housewife Maria Guzman in San Jose Platanar in Puebla state was left completely uninhabitable by the quake, forcing her into a shelter.

"The most valuable thing that I recovered was the photo of my wedding day," Guzman said outside the shattered building.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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