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Surfside search efforts shift from rescue to recovery as hopes of finding survivors fade

Search of the Surfside condominium collapse shifted from rescue to recovery on Wednesday as hopes of finding survivors faded, AP reports.

The latest: The death toll from the June 24 Champlain Towers South collapse has climbed to 46, with 94 people still missing. The decision to move to recovery comes after rescue teams searched through new areas of rubble made accessible following the demolition of the remaining part of the building.


  • The decision allows responders to use different techniques to sort through the wreckage, according to former Miami-Dade fire chief Dave Downey, who previously told the Washington Post that he had to make similar calls in Florida and twice while in Haiti following the 2010 earthquake.
  • Families were told Wednesday in a private briefing that emergency crews would continue to search for victims' bodies, but rescue dogs and sound devices would be removed from the site, per AP.
  • Rescue crews have searched the rubble for 14 days, with the only recovered survivor found in the early hours after the collapse, USA Today notes.

The big picture: At least32 victims have been identified and next of kin have been notified, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said at a press briefing earlier Wednesday.

  • "Our first responders have truly searched that pile every day since the collapse as if they’re searching for their own families," Levine Cava added, who spoke through tears as she communicated the death toll in Spanish.
  • The first funeral was held for victims of the tragedy on Tuesday. Lucia Guara, 10, and her 4-year-old sister, Emma, were buried in the same white coffin in a grave alongside their parents, Marcus and Ana Guara, WPLG reports.
  • Rescuers had removed about 124 tons of debris from the site as of Tuesday, Miami-Dade Fire Rescue chief Alan Cominsky said.

Go deeper: Remembering the victims of the Surfside condo collapse

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Abiy Ahmed: Ethiopia's Nobel peace laureate cracks down on ethnic violence

Abiy Ahmed on Saturday, appearing on state TV.

The image of a Nobel Peace laureatein military fatigues encapsulates the moment in which Ethiopia finds itself — on the verge of a transition to democracy, a descent into violence or, perhaps, a precarious combination of the two.

Driving the news: At least 166 people were killed after an iconic musician, Haacaaluu Hundeessaa, was murdered last Monday in Addis Ababa, the capital. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed responded to the violence by sending in troops and shutting off the internet. High-profile opposition leaders were arrested, along with some 2,300 others.

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