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Home / World

Earthquake victims worlds apart

By Frank Bajak
NZ Herald·
28 Feb, 2010 03:00 PM5 mins to read

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PORT-AU-PRINCE: The earthquake in Chile was far stronger than the one that struck Haiti last month - yet the death toll in this Caribbean nation is magnitudes higher.

The reasons are simple.

Chile is wealthier and infinitely better prepared, with strict building codes, robust emergency response and a long history
of handling seismic catastrophes.

No living Haitian had experienced a quake at home when the January 12 disaster crumbled their poorly constructed buildings.

And Chile was relatively lucky this time.

Saturday's quake was centred offshore, an estimated 34km underground in a relatively unpopulated area, while Haiti's tectonic mayhem struck closer to the surface - about 13km - and right on the edge of Port-au-Prince.

"Earthquakes don't kill - they don't create damage - if there's nothing to damage," said Eric Calais, a Purdue University geophysicist studying the Haiti quake.

The United States Geological Survey says eight Haitian cities and towns - including the capital of 3 million - suffered "violent" to "extreme" shaking in last month's 7-magnitude quake, which Haiti's Government estimates killed 220,000 people and left about 1.2 homeless.

Chile's death toll was in the hundreds.

By contrast, no Chilean urban area suffered more than "severe" shaking - the third most serious level - in it's 8.8-magnitude disaster, by USGS measure. The quake was centred 325km away from the capital and largest city, Santiago.

In terms of energy released at the epicentre, said Calais, the Chilean quake was 900 times stronger. But energy dissipates rather quickly as distances grow from epicentres - and the ground beneath Port-au-Prince is less stable by comparison and "shakes like jelly," says University of Miami geologist Tim Dixon.

Survivors of Haiti's quake described abject panic - much of it well-founded as buildings imploded around them. Many Haitians grabbed cement pillars only to watch them crumble in their hands.

Haitians were not schooled in how to react - by sheltering under tables and door frames, and away from glass windows.

Chileans, on the other hand, have homes and offices built to ride out quakes, their steel skeletons designed to sway with seismic waves rather than resist them.

"When you look at the architecture in Chile you see buildings that have damage, but not the complete pancaking that you've got in Haiti," said Cameron Sinclair, executive director of Architecture for Humanity, a 10-year-old nonprofit organisation that has helped people in 36 countries rebuild after disasters.

Sinclair said he has architect colleagues in Chile who have built thousands of low-income housing structures to be earthquake resistance.

In Haiti, by contrast, there is no building code.

Patrick Midy, a leading Haitian architect, said he knew of only three earthquake-resistant buildings in the Western Hemisphere's poorest country.

Sinclair's San Francisco-based organisation received 400 requests for help the day after the Haiti quake but he said it had yet to receive a single request for help for Chile.

"On a per-capita basis, Chile has more world-renowned seismologists and earthquake engineers than anywhere else," said Brian Tucker, president of GeoHazards International, a nonprofit organisation based in Palo Alto, California.

Their advice is heeded by the Government in Latin America's wealthiest nation, getting built not just into architects' blueprints and building codes but also into government contingency planning.

"The fact that the President [Michelle Bachelet] was out giving minute-to-minute reports a few hours after the quake in the middle of the night gives you an indication of their disaster response," said Sinclair.

Most Haitians didn't know whether their President, Rene Preval, was alive or dead for at least a day after the quake. The National Palace and his residence - like most government buildings - had collapsed.

Haiti's TV, cellphone networks and radio stations were knocked off the air by the seismic jolt.

Calais noted that frequent seismic activity is as common to Chile as it is to the rest of the Andean ridge.

Chile experienced the strongest earthquake on record in 1960, and Saturday's quake was the nation's third of over magnitude-8.7.

"It's quite likely that every person there has felt a major earthquake in their lifetime," he said, "whereas the last one to hit Port-au-Prince was 250 years ago. So who remembers?"

On Port-au-Prince's streets Saturday, many people had not heard of Chile's quake.

More than half a million are homeless, most still lack electricity and are preoccupied about trying to get enough to eat.

Fanfan Bozot, a 32-year-old reggae singer having lunch with a friend, could only shake his head at his Government's reliance on international relief to distribute food and water.

"Chile has a responsible Government," he said, waving his hand in disgust. "Our Government is incompetent."

Deadly Difference:

CHILE

* Quake 34km underground, centred offshore

* Latin America's wealthiest nation

* Previous disasters have spawned a high degree of planning

* Homes and offices built to ride out quakes

* Has world-renowned seismologists and earthquake engineers

HAITI

* Quake 13km deep, centre near Port-au-Prince

* Western Hemisphere's poorest nation

* The last major earthquake was 250 years ago

* Haitians not schooled in how to react

* No building code, few earthquake-resistant buildings

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