Eleven members of Monica Segura’s family were gathered inside the Santa Cruz church in northeast Mexico for the baptism of her 1-year-old nephew when the roof collapsed killing at least 11 people.
Segura and others were near a side of the church when the roof fell Sunday and managed to escape with relatively minor injuries. Her 10-year-old daughter was buried in the rubble and remained in intensive care Monday, among 13 people who were still hospitalized.
“Everything happened in a matter of seconds,” Segura said. “A beam fell and immediately the roof fell.”
“I was trapped. I had my other (2-year-old) baby in my arms. Someone helped me get the baby out and I was able to get out a window and then we returned to look for my other girl,” Segura said. “She was trapped in the rubble.” Her 1-year-old nephew suffered a broken arm, she said.
By Monday evening the site in Ciudad Madero in Tamaulipas state had been cleared and no other victims found.
The state security spokesman’s office said it appeared to be “a structural failure.”
Father Ángel Vargas said he was moving from pew to pew at the start of the baptism Mass for several children when a beam gave way bringing his church’s roof crashing down on dozens of people.
Vargas recounted the harrowing collapse to Radio Formula on Monday.
“Some people could get out and others no,” said Vargas, who described how the roof did not collapse in some areas like around the altar, allowing himself and others to escape. “It is a terrible experience and it has been even worse because of the fact that people were lost.”
Many of those gathered at the Santa Cruz church on Sunday were elderly and children, because there were about five baptisms taking place. The toll could have been much higher, because a short time earlier some 300 people had been in the sanctuary for Mass.
Authorities called off the search early Monday. After initially fearing that dozens could still be trapped under the rubble, searches led them to believe no one remained unaccounted for.
Tamaulipas Gov. Américo Villarreal said trained dogs and thermal imaging cameras had been used to search under the collapsed concrete.
“The most likely thing, I can’t affirm it 100%, is that there aren’t any more people trapped,” Villarreal said. Describing the efforts by the dogs and rescue teams, he said “there are no indications of life inside the collapsed area.”
That optimism will be put to the test when cranes start lifting chunks of the collapsed slab off the floor and the tops of pews.
Three of the dead were children, and on the list of people who had been injured were a 4-month-old baby, three 5-year-olds and two 9-year-olds.
“Unfortunately, the elderly and children were those who suffered the most, the ones who were most trapped, the ones who suffered the most deaths, I think,” said Father Pablo Galván, a priest who was just outside in the church parking lot Sunday when the collapse occurred. He had just finished celebrating the main Mass.
Describing that moment, Galván said “the roof just simply and plainly collapsed, like an implosion, like when you crush a can.”
“It fell, there was no time to do anything. It was like two seconds. We still can’t understand what happened,” Galván said.
Even though the cause of the collapse was described as structural failure, Gov. Villarreal said no problems with the church had been reported previously.
“It was over 50 years old, it was here functioning and operating with no problem, with no sign of any defect,” Villarreal said.
The roof appeared to be made of relatively thin poured concrete, and photos distributed by state authorities showed the roof slab resting on the top of pews in some parts of the church. That may have left enough space to have saved some lives.
Building collapses are common in Mexico during earthquakes, but the National Seismological Service did not report any seismic activity strong enough to cause such damage at the time of the collapse. Nor was there any immediate indication of an explosion.
Ciudad Madero is about 310 miles (500 kilometers) south of Brownsville, Texas. Tamaulipas is known for drug cartel violence, but Ciudad Madero is in the southern part of the state near neighboring Veracruz state and has been less touched by the violence.