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'God help us:' rescue worker at collapsed Chile building "We'll have to work with the precision of watchmakers. May God help us," fire chief Juan Carlos Subercaseaux said Monday as his team worked to free Chileans trapped in quake rubble. Workers using specially-designed cameras and search dogs had located at least three survivors by afternoon, all trapped in the ruins of the massive 15-story Borde Rio building, which crumpled onto its back after Saturday's quake. More than two days after the 8.8-magnitude quake, sounds of life were coming from apartment 602, where three, possibly four, people were believed to be alive, Diego Caruezo, head of fire department operations at the scene, told AFP. A fifth survivor had been located close by in the building, which became a focal point for rescue efforts in the country's ravaged second city. "We think that there are four people in one apartment and another in an apartment next door," Caruezo said. Some 175 firemen worked to pierce the side of the building to get to some of the 35 people believed to be inside, though no one could say how many of the residents were still alive. "Rescue team. Is there anyone there? If you can't speak, knock two times," a rescue worker said. After a moment of absolute silence, a distant sound could be heard echoing through the ruins. Firefighters marked up the length of the building, which now lay flush with the ground, painting numbers to indicate where each floor started -- 6, 7, 9. "We can't explain why it fell over, rather than collapsing top to bottom like the Twin Towers," said Caruezo. Subercaseaux told AFP the rescue operation was extremely delicate because drilling through walls to reach survivors could cause the entire structure to collapse and crush them. Workers armed with machines capable of piercing the walls worked to create something like a tunnel between two floors to try to reach those trapped inside apartment 602. Elsewhere, large triangles big enough for a person to escape through had been cut into the concrete. Nearby, search dogs Berkan, Kuro and Queenie -- all veterans of the Haiti earthquake rescue effort in January -- stood ready to assist. Crews had pulled eight bodies from the building and said a ninth had been located inside. An emotional resident, Alex Tapia, told TV de Chile television station he had been inside when the building collapsed. "I fell with the building and thank God I am here," he said. "It's like being born again." Caretaker Ewin Jimenez said the building fell in a matter of seconds. "First the pillars moved from side to side, then it collapsed and everything was destroyed," said Jimenez, who only survived because he jumped out of a window. There were scenes of devastation throughout the city, with rows of collapsed buildings and cars crushed by chunks of concrete. There was no electricity and only patchy telephone communications. President-elect Sebastian Pinera, in the region touring the worst-affected areas, described seeing sick people sleeping in the streets and hearing cries coming from collapsed buildings that rescue crews had not yet reached. "The situation is worse than expected," he said. Troops were deployed alongside police to keep the peace after looters began to comb through the ruins of supermarkets looking for basic foodstuffs and other items. Deputy Interior Minister Patricio Rosende said the government had purchased all the food in the city's major supermarkets and planned to distribute it free of charge. Food would also be brought in on a barge and two Chilean Air Force planes, he said. But looting continued even after the imposition of a curfew, the first since the end of Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship in 1990, and Rosende said at least 160 people had been arrested for violating the measure. Despite the arrests, he said most residents had observed the curfew. "The public cooperated. It understood the need for a curfew. One has to understand the anguish that many people feel because on top of the constant aftershocks, there is the darkness, the uncertainty." All rights reserved. © 2005 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.
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