Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Deadly Earthquake hits Peru

Some weeks ago various cities in Peru were affected by a 7.9 (ritcher scale) earthquake that shook the country violently for over 2 minutes.
Over 500 dead, 1000 wounded, 35000 families with loses, 33000 homes destroyed. These are some of the numbers this disaster left.
Economists estimate it will cost the country over 250 million dollars to rebuild what was destroyed.
These deadly natural disasters occur often in countries like Japan and USA, unlike them however, Peru is not economically prepared to confront this situation.
A simple example ... for each household destroyed each family will get about $2000 (best case scenario, so says the news) in aid. $2000 dollars is suppose to help them rebuild what took their entire lives and savings to construct. That without mentioning the fact that these people have lost their jobs and after a few months will be forgotten by the government.

How can you help?
The embassy of Peru in Tokyo has opened two accounts (with just 500 yen an entire family in Peru can eat all their meals ... the affected areas were very poor)
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BANCO DO BRASIL - TOKYO BRANCH ACCOUNT NUMBER: 314555 - 4 (NAME)SISMO PERU 2007 - EMBASSY OF PERU
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MIZUHO BANK - KAMATA BRANCH ACCOUNT NUMBER : 1195505 (NAME)PERU DAIJISHIN GIENKIN GUCHI - SISMO PERU 2007
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I was thinking on organizing a charity race ... but have no idea where to begin. I guess with all the races going on this fall it might be hard to find a place available.

This is an article from Reuters from the day after the disaster. The exact numbers are larger.
Peru earthquake kills 450, bodies in streets

By Jean Luis ArcePISCO, Peru, Aug 16 (Reuters) -

Peruvians pulled hundreds of dead from the rubble of homes and churches on Thursday and bodies piled up on street corners after a huge earthquake ravaged the country's central coast.
Firefighters, civil defense officials and the United Nations said about 450 were killed in the 8.0-magnitude quake on Wednesday night. Some 2,000 people were hurt and the death toll was expected to rise, with local media reporting more than 500 dead.
As rescuers scrambled through the debris in search of survivors, dazed residents guarded bodies on the street, unsure where to take them. Many of the victims were poor and were trapped after their traditional adobe-brick homes collapsed.
In the hard-hit town of Pisco, south of the capital Lima, at least 50 bodies were laid out in the main square, where a church caved in during a service.
"They had gone to the church for a mass to commemorate a dead loved one," said Enrique Gonzales, 48, sobbing as he searched for his wife and three sisters-in-law. "They never came back."
The rescue of a man from the ruins of the devastated church brought some hope to rescue teams battling into the night to find survivors amid the rubble.
The U.S. Geological Survey upgraded the quake's magnitude to 8.0 from an earlier 7.9 measurement, and powerful aftershocks rattled the country on Thursday.
Hospitals were overwhelmed with the injured and morgues with the dead, forcing Peruvians to place dead bodies pulled from crumbled mud-brick houses on city streets.
In the town of Chincha, wounded people lay on the floor in San Jose hospital, where walls were destroyed by the quake.
"We don't know what to do. I don't know where to hold a wake for her," Jose Flores, a boy about 12 years old, said as he stood near the body of his dead mother outside their destroyed home in the city 125 miles (200 km) south of Lima.
"The wall just came down and crushed her when I was outside," he said.
PRISON ESCAPE
Hundreds of prisoners ran out of Chincha's Tambo de Mora prison after the earthquake ripped the old building apart.
"The authorities couldn't do anything. It was really hard to control all the prisoners," said Manuel Aguilar, vice president of Peru's prison authority. He said 29 prisoners stayed behind.
In the San Juan de Dios hospital in Pisco, doctor Ricardo Cabrera said staff was struggling to cope with 200 wounded, more than 40 dead and no power.
Many people were left homeless around Pisco and Chincha, where the huge tremor was felt the strongest, cracking highways and cutting power and telephone lines.
The Red Cross said it would send planes with tents, blankets and other aid from Panama.
With a major highway ruined, Peruvian rescuers airlifted victims by helicopter and aircraft to hospitals in Lima. Officials appealed for blood donors to come forward so they could treat the injured.
President Alan Garcia visited rubble-strewn towns and sent condolences to the families of the quake's victims.
It was one of the worst natural disasters to hit Peru in the last century. In 1970, an earthquake killed an estimated 50,000 Peruvians in catastrophic avalanches of ice and mud that buried the town of Yungay.
The USGS said the quake on Wednesday was centered about 90 miles (145 km) southeast of Lima at a depth of around 25 miles (40 km) and was closely followed by nine aftershocks.
Peru is a leading minerals producer, but many of its major mines sit far away from the quake zone. The Cerro Lindo copper, zinc and lead mine near the zone suspended operations due to power cuts but its structures were not damaged.
In the central square of Lima, the Peruvian flag flew at half-mast as Garcia declared three days of national mourning.


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