Peruvians frustrated over slow emergency aid looted pharmacies and scuffled in food lines on Friday as rescuers picked through rubble for survivors two days after a massive earthquake killed at least 510 people.
The Pacific coast city of Pisco, one of the hardest hit by the quake, suffered so many deaths that families squabbled in a graveyard over spots to bury their dead.
With the death toll still rising from a magnitude 8.0 earthquake that struck south of the capital Lima on Wednesday evening, a powerful aftershock renewed panic on Friday and some people sprinted away from food lines in Pisco.
Gloria Diaz, 63, complained about sparse aid as she stood with dozens of people in line in front of a Pisco pastry shop.
"You think this is enough to live on?" she asked as she waited for a small sandwich with a group of her grandchildren.
People in dusty clothes, distraught after two nights without shelter, bemoaned a lack of medical attention and emergency supplies.
On the outskirts of Pisco, small groups blocked the road, stopping and looting aid trucks arriving from Lima.
President Alan Garcia visited the disaster area, promising food and water but also warning that the government would go after looters.
"The state protects but the state also maintains order," he said.
Countries throughout Latin America, as well as the United States and European nations, were sending or have pledged aid.
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