"A residential building in La Guaira sustained severe damage, with one resident reported killed and another injured following US strikes on Venezuela on Saturday. Footage from Sunday shows the three-storey building in La Soublette's Block 12 with collapsed walls, shattered windows and debris scattered across the site. Locals can be seen examining the damage, as some recounted their experiences from the previous night. "I feel the blast, and the walls of my apartment vibrated. My daughter comes out of the rooms and already calls: 'mom it's shaking'," recounted Yoryina Quijada, a local living in the area. "I feel the second blast and I go out. I open the door and ask my neighbours, because all the window glasses shattered and the sound was horrible, and I tell my neighbours: 'Are you okay, are you okay?' [...] When we felt the shockwave, the smoke. What did we feel? We were all scared," she continued. According to local media, one resident lost her life and another was seriously injured during the attack. The victim was identified as 80-year-old Roselena Gonzalez, who reportedly died after a blast destroyed part of the building she lived in. "I felt two impacts," recalled Jesus Linares, another local living in the building. "My daughter gets up also startled and asks me 'what happened?' and I tell her: daughter, we are being invaded." Lineras denounced Venezuelan support for the US operation, emphasising that it is those still living in the country that bear the cost of foreign military intervention. "That is not loving your homeland, that is not loving Venezuela, because it is easy [to say] 'I am outside and I ask for invasion' and what about those of us inside? Nobody lived through what we experienced yesterday early morning," he stressed." "Now my question is the following: who will pay for my neighbours' housing, for the damage caused? Are we collateral damage, as they say? I mean, this needs to be understood. Today it was Venezuela, tomorrow who?," another added. The US launched 'large-scale' strikes on Venezuela on Saturday, capturing President Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores. President Donald Trump announced on Saturday that the US will 'run' Venezuela until a "safe, proper and judicious transition" can be ensured. US Attorney General Pam Bondi said the Venezuelan leader was charged with a 'narco-terrorism conspiracy' and other drug and weapons charges. Meanwhile, Caracas declared a national emergency, blasting the US over its attempt to "seize Venezuela's strategic resources, particularly its oil and minerals." The attack drew widespread worldwide condemnation, including from Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Chile and others in Latin America, as well as from BRICS nations like Russia and China. The EU and European nations called for 'international law' to be respected."