Alvaro Bello
a white building has one wall complete missing, giving it a horrible doll-house appearance; inside you can see six floors' worth of people's lives: kitchen appliances, tables and chairs, and a painting of a tree and birds on a wall above an orange sofa
Miguel Medina/Pool Photo via AP

After earthquakes, Illinois man worries over countrymen in Venezuela

Two powerful earthquakes struck Caracas, Venezuela's capital, in quick succession last week — a magnitude 7.1 followed less than a minute later by a magnitude 7.5. As of air time, more than 2,200 deaths have been linked to the quakes, with more than 40,000 people still unaccounted for.

Alvaro Bello grew up in Venezuela and still has friends and family there. he works with The Immigration Project, an organization accredited by the U.S. Department of Justice to help immigrants with paperwork, though he joins us today as a private citizen. Bello talks what he's heard from contacts in Venezuela, the scale of the destruction, and how Venezuelans in Illinois are responding.

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