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Chile earthquake aftermath: A look at Santiago

March 8, 2010 |  6:42 pm
Chileyouth1 (2) 

There's been a sweeping outpouring of solidarity in Santiago with victims of the magnitude 8.8. earthquake in Chile's central-southern regions, as  reported in the L.A. Times. Chile's modern capital city was not as heavily damaged by the Feb. 27 quake as other more heavily affected areas, but its landscape and culture have been affected in subtle ways in the quake aftermath.

I've spent a week exploring the culture here, checking out interesting neighborhoods, riding the metro, watching the local news and reading a range of local newspapers. Residents tell me the city feels calmer since the quake. People dropped coins into collection boxes, hung Chilean flags from windows and balconies, and donated tons of food, clothing, and supplies intended for the victims.

In the press, psychologists are reminding Chileans that it is “OK to cry.” It's as though Chileans are still searching for ways to deal with the emotional and psychological aftershocks that come with a historically devastating seismic event.

“Before we were just staring at our bellybuttons, individualists, not knowing our neighbors,” said Catherine Mayozer, a television actress emceeing a rowdy benefit concert at Bustamante Park in downtown Santiago. “This has made Chileans speak to one another again, to speak on the streets, on the buses.”

The city has endured two to three major aftershocks a day since last week’s “megathrust” earthquake – and then some. A 6.4 earthquake hit to the north of the capital on Thursday night, followed by up to four considerable aftershocks between midnight and breakfast time on Friday.

More were recorded on Sunday, including a magnitude 5.0 temblor off the coast of Valparaiso. And then -- almost cruelly -- two more considerable aftershocks hit Santiago before dawn Monday, one measuring 4.9 and another measuring 5.1.

In all, nearly 200 aftershocks have rattled nerves in central Chile. Inside homes and apartment buildings, fresh cracks crawl across walls. Day after day, windows and lampshades rattle, walls buckle slightly, and floors sway gently for a few seconds, as if in a lilting breeze. The effect is dizzying.

“We get used to it,” said a gray-haired barber named Luis Baeza. “You control the fear.”

Baeza said he rode out the 9.5-magnitude quake in May 1960 – the largest ever recorded on the planet – as a child in his mother’s arms. He held his own son through the magnitude 8.0 quake of March 1985. And he watched his son hold onto his grandson through the recent big quake.

“In a month, everyone will build their houses just where they were,” Baeza said, shrugging. “That’s how we are.”

People in Santiago have responded with a range of complex emotions to the quake. There was embarrassment and shame at images of looting, which exposed, in the words of social scientist Claudio Fuentes Saavedra, "the two faces of Chile" -- the economic and social disparities that persist despite years of economic progress.

And there was anger at what's been called a tepid government response in the immediate aftermath of the quake, a fair share of finger-pointing, as well as the gallows humor that permeated conversations.

“Foreign friends visiting bars get surprised to see a popular drink called an Earthquake, which is just white wine and pineapple ice cream,” said Sonia Lira, a local columnist. “So, when kids in the bars want another round they holler ‘An aftershock is coming, why don’t you join me?’ "

The people of Santiago regularly visit the coastal areas that were severely damaged by the quake’s tsunami waves, making images of destruction from the Bio Bio and Maule regions difficult to bear, many said. The political ramifications of the quake were also challenging for regular Chileans.

The brutal military dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet ended just two decades ago. President Michelle Bachelet – who was herself held and tortured during the regime – came under criticism for not sending the military earlier to maintain order in the most affected regions. But the military also faced criticism for not alerting some coastal regions about a potential tsunami after the quake struck.

“I was conflicted about it,” said Selena Molina, 32, an anthropology student at the University of Chile, referring to the presence of soldiers on the streets. “But people needed order, and on top of that there was the riffraff who were taking things that weren’t necessary.”

“The thing is Chileans are used to having weapons around,” Molina added. “So without that, people had respect for nothing.”

Molina and a group of her friends were at a benefit concert at Bustamante Park. Night had fallen as it was winding down. Young people crowded the sidewalks and plazas above the underground Baquedano metro station, playing guitars, singing, chanting, holding aloft large bottles of Cristal, a low-cost Chilean lager that someone described as this country's "Budweiser."

It was one of the rowdiest, loudest concerts I've ever experienced -- and I've survived plenty of rowdy outdoor concerts living in Mexico City. Watching the scene I understood exactly what a young woman meant when she she said the event was like a "release" for Chile's youth, who will now be forever marked by the 2010 earthquake.

— Daniel Hernandez in Santiago, Chile.

Photo: Chileans attend a benefit concert in Santiago. Credit: Daniel Hernandez

 


Brazil and the U.S. agree to work together on deforestation

March 6, 2010 | 12:18 pm

Brazil

The United States and Brazil signed a memorandum of understanding to work together to slash greenhouse gas emissions from tropical deforestation, one of the main drivers of global climate change. The deal, signed by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton in Brasilia on Wednesday, marks the first time the two countries have formally agreed to work together on deforestation.

In the past, Brazilian leaders have been wary of foreign interference in the Amazon, Earth's largest tropical forest. But climate scientists are raising loud alarms that the slashing and burning of forests, which cause about 15% of the emissions that are trapping heat in the atmosphere, threatens to dangerously disrupt the world's climate.

Indonesia and Brazil are, respectively, the globe's third- and fourth-biggest emitters of carbon dioxide, after the U.S. and China, mainly because of how rapidly they are destroying their forests. In Copenhagen in December, a group of nations made progress in negotiating rules for quantifying the carbon saved by avoiding deforestation, so that credits could be used to offset industrial emissions, a program known as "Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation" -- or REDD.

Continue reading "Rainforest pact: Brazil and the U.S. agree to cooperate" by Margot Roosevelt on Greenspace.

Photo: Rodrigo Gonsalvis Simois, 16, in December carries charred logs to a pile where they will eventually be stacked in a kiln for making charcoal. His family's Taruma Mirim land in Brazil is being slashed and burned to make way for a plantation as well as charcoal production. Credit: Brian Vander Brug / Los Angeles Times


Fear, despair haunt Chile coast

March 6, 2010 | 11:57 am

Chile_earthquake_dichato

Barely a building remains standing in this once-pleasant beach resort that slopes up from Chile's Dichato Bay, a scenic cove largely shielded from the open Pacific.

The row of eateries and bars that once lined the shore are smashed to pieces. The central plaza is a pile of debris: splintered wood beams, bent metal roofs, dented gas tanks, fences, broken trees and kitchen appliances, among other objects. Fishing boats have been tossed a mile into town and beyond.

The magnitude 8.8 earthquake that struck Chile last week clearly caused a lot of damage, but here and in other coastal communities it was the ensuing tsunami that proved most destructive.

Residents in Dichato said the waves came ashore between the headlands over several hours, engulfing houses, boats, cars and everything else in their way.

Continue reading "Chile's coast haunted by fear, desolation" from Chris Kraul in Dichato.

Photo: A painting lies amid the ruins of a home in Dichato, a small beach enclave where 17 people died and as many as 50 are missing. Credit: Michael Robinson Chavez / Los Angeles Times.

RELATED:

Photos: 8.8 earthquake rocks Chile.


Chile earthquake: President-elect takes reins, though he's not in charge yet

March 5, 2010 |  9:08 am

Sebastian_pinera_chile A week before he takes office, Chilean President-elect Sebastian Pinera is already operating like a man in charge as his nation reels from one of history's strongest earthquakes. He is directing relief efforts, touring disaster sites, appointing Cabinet members -- and gently criticizing the way his soon-to-be predecessor has handled the disaster.

Pinera, 60, who is one of Chile's wealthiest investors, on Thursday noted what he found to be the "weaknesses, discoordination and deficiencies" in the quake response efforts led by outgoing President Michelle Bachelet.

"We will not be the government of the earthquake," the silver-haired Pinera said, speaking at his former campaign headquarters as he announced his appointments of officials to govern six of Chile's regions. "We will be the government of reconstruction."

It was lost on no one that his appointee to head the region surrounding hard-hit Concepcion, Chile's second-largest city, was that city's mayor, one of the most vocal critics of Bachelet.

Pinera will assume the presidency Thursday as the first conservative to lead Chile since the end of a brutal military dictatorship two decades ago.

Continue reading "Chile's Pinera takes reins, though he's not in charge yet" by Daniel Hernandez.

Photo: Chilean President-elect Sebastian Pinera tours a disaster site in Concepcion, one of many he has visited since the earthquake. Credit: Francesco Degasperi / AFP/Getty Images

RELATED:

Photos: 8.8 earthquake rocks Chile

Audio slide show: Photographer's report from earthquake zone Constitucion, Chile


Let the weddings begin for Mexico City gay couples

March 4, 2010 |  2:29 pm

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Gay couples converged at Mexico City government offices Thursday to apply for marriage licenses under a new law that gives same-sex pairs permission to wed and adopt children.

Fiercely opposed by the Roman Catholic Church, the law applies only to the Mexican capital and is the most permissive in Latin America. Conservative political parties and the federal government have said they will fight in courts to overturn the law.

For the happy couples, however, this was a historic moment that many said gave them a sense of freedom and belonging they had long missed. Actual weddings will begin late next week, officials said.

You can read about passage of the law late last year in The Times, plus our editorial on the matter.

-- Tracy Wilkinson in Mexico City

Photo: Same-sex couples fill out paperwork for marriage licenses in Mexico City. Credit: El Universal newspaper


Destination Chile: Two L. A. Times journalists hustle to the earthquake zone

March 2, 2010 | 10:44 pm

ChilePhotoBlogMichaelRChavez030210

Times staff writer Patrick J. McDonnell, a veteran foreign correspondent, scrambled to quickly get from Los Angeles to Chile to cover the massive earthquake that struck there last weekend. McDonnell and Times photographer Michael Robinson Chavez have spent the past few days on the ground reporting on the chaos and efforts to bring order and deliver aid. McDonnell filed the following dispatch on how the pair managed to get to Chile for the big story:

Sometimes, reporting on breaking news is almost as much about the logistics of getting to the location as actually getting the story. After all, if you can’t get there, what difference does it make how good the story is, or was?

It’s often a dilemma for reporters, especially those working abroad who repeatedly grapple with what many travelers see: capricious airplane schedules, unreliable airports and grumpy ticket counter personnel, among other hurdles. Disasters and wars multiply the challenge: Airports shut down, roads are closed, officials and travel bureaucrats go into a deny-access mode.

That’s a bit of background for a small logistics tale about covering the Chilean earthquake. A photographer colleague and I were tasked Saturday with getting to Chile to cover the big quake. Problem was, we were in Los Angeles, half a world way, or so it seemed. So how to get there as quickly as possible? We were already losing time compared with journalists based in South America.

Fortunately, we found a flight on LAN Airlines leaving about noon, nonstop to Lima, Peru. Normally, Lima is an ideal point from which to enter Chile. But the airport in Santiago, the Chilean capital, was shut down because of the quake. And so was LAN’s ticketing function.

From experience, I knew that American Airlines had a ticket-sharing relationship with LAN. American accepted our payment, and soon we were on our way to Lima, confident we would find a way into Chile, if not directly into Santiago, perhaps via Buenos Aires and overland through the Andes.

Sometimes a good break like this portends a string of good luck, I thought. Not so fast.

The chaotic airport in Lima initially offered no way out. No flights to Santiago. No possibility of getting on the overbooked flights to Buenos Aires. The traditional tools of charm, cajoling and even flashing some greenbacks didn’t seem to work.

The quake had sown disarray and turmoil. Stranded passengers had been waiting for days and were angry. A ticket salesclerk seemed to relish our anguish. He kept encouraging us to try different Internet and telephone methods, but in the end nothing worked. I wondered if he was playing with our heads, savoring his spoiler role in the logistics drama.

We spent the night in the airport, exhausting possibilities, going slowly mad. We seriously contemplated a route through Brazil, then Buenos Aires, then overland to Chile. Who knows when we would have arrived?

Desperate, we jumped on a flight to Tacna, Peru, on the border with Chile. From there we could cross the border into Chile in a taxi, and see if there was a plane going south from Arica, the Chilean border city. It didn’t seem very promising. We’d heard that no one was flying in Chile. Most likely, we’d end up having to take a 30-hour road trip through the Atacama desert, drier than the Sahara, they say, before even arriving in Santiago — still hundreds of miles of bad roads away from the earthquake zone.

The flight to Tacna detoured through Cusco, a lovely mountain city with pleasant hotels and first-class restaurants. I felt melancholy seeing the Inca capital disappear in the window as the plane lifted off for cheerless Tacna.

The border crossing was painless enough, and we found a genial taxi man, Andres, who knew how to cut corners. But the relentlessly harsh light and the gloomy milieu brought back memories of the Jordan-Iraq border crossing, a sinister place I had negotiated many times. This didn’t seem promising. The airport at Arica, on the Chilean side, looked like it had been left over from the dawn of aviation, preserved somehow in the dry heat. Missing were any sign of aircraft, or people.

We trudged into the terminal, sure that this was an exercise in futility. All the LAN counters were closed. But we noticed a few folks huddled at a side counter of Sky Airline, a regional carrier. We ambled up to the counter. A woman, apparently a passenger, passed by carrying a boarding pass for … Santiago!

Outside, beyond our view, an old Boeing workhorse was getting ready to take wing south to the Chilean capital. Yes, the woman at the counter said, there might be room for two more. Remarkably, completely unexpectedly, it all turned out to be true. Ten minutes later — a stop for a soft drink or a cigarette — and we would have missed this unscheduled flight, our deliverance, the freedom bird, as my colleague christened it. We boarded a near-full flight that was making final preparations to take off. It was like stepping into some alternate reality zone. Once aloft, we watched the narrow ribbon of an endless road south that we had fortuitously avoided. We were in Santiago in three hours.

It was time to start covering the devastation of the earthquake and a tsunami that followed, wreaking havoc. 

More logistical challenges lay ahead.

-- Patrick J. McDonnell in Concepcion, Chile

Photo: The city of Constitucion, Chile, was hit hard by the earthquake and a tsunami. A store near the Plaza de Armas was little more than a pile of rubble. Credit: Michael Robinson Chavez / Los Angeles Times.

More of the Times coverage of the Chile earthquake:

Chile sends army into post-quake chaos

"Run! Run! Maremoto!" Tsunami!

Chile scrambles to distribute aid, quell disorder

Rescuers search for Chile quake survivors; death toll jumps to 708

Audio slide show: Photographer's report from earthquake zone Constitucion, Chile


 


Chile earthquake: Army arrests curfew violators, more bodies recovered

March 1, 2010 |  3:25 pm

Chile_quake The Chilean army, enforcing emergency decrees aimed at containing widespread looting, arrested scores of people Monday for violating an overnight curfew as the country reeled from the weekend's devastating earthquake.

The death toll climbed to 711 as more bodies were pulled from the ruins of cities and towns hardest hit by the  magnitude 8.8  quake.

Faced with outbreaks of looting in Concepcion, just 70 miles from the quake's epicenter, President Michelle Bachelet deployed 10,000 troops to restore order and assist in the recovery of bodies and search for survivors.

She slapped a dusk-to-dawn curfew on Concepcion, Chile's second-largest city. Most of the city's quarter-million residents seemed to heed the warning, remaining in their homes or makeshift camps overnight. But about 150 people were arrested for violating the curfew, officials said.

Deputy Interior Minister Patricio Rosende downplayed reports of roving mobs and vigilantes in suburbs around Concepcion.

Continue reading In quake aftermath, Chile's army arrests curfew violators, more bodies recovered by Patrick J. McDonnell and Tracy Wilkinson from Santiago, Chile, and Mexico City.

Photo: A man pushes a coffin. Victims' bodies are lined up at a gym in Constitucion, Chile. Credit: Roberto Candia / Associated Press.


RELATED:

Photos: 8.8 earthquake rocks Chile.


Chile earthquake: Southern California's Chilean community organizes to help quake victims

March 1, 2010 |  9:19 am
Southern California's small but tightknit Chilean community scrambled Sunday to contact loved ones affected by the magnitude 8.8 earthquake that struck their homeland Saturday, and began organizing to help victims.

"We have a lot of anguish," said Jorge Rojas, 44, whose family is from Talca, a region hit hard by the quake, which was centered offshore of the southern city of Concepción. "You can't see your family. You can't even talk with them."

Rojas' San Bernardino group, Club de Huasos, which celebrates Chilean cowboy traditions, planned to meet with the consul general Monday to ask how club members might help. The group is small, Rojas said, but "if we can do anything to help them, I'll be happy."

Continue reading Southern California's Chilean community organizes to help quake victims by Paloma Esquivel.

Chile earthquake: Clinton says U.S. ready to work 'in solidarity' with leaders of Chile

March 1, 2010 |  8:07 am
Clinton U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday the United States is ready to work "in solidarity" with the leaders of Chile to provide disaster assistance to the earthquake-stricken country.

Speaking to reporters while traveling in Montevideo, Uruguay, Clinton said the Chileans had asked for communications equipment and said she'd be bringing some with her when she traveled to Santiago Tuesday.

Clinton said more will come after that, adding that "one of the reasons they have asked me to continue my trip is to assess whatever else they might need and immediately begin the process of providing it."

Earlier, U.S. Ambassador Paul Simons said he knew of no American deaths from the earthquake but stressed that officials were having a difficult time getting information from Concepcion, the area most devastated by the quake.

Continue reading »

Chile earthquake: U.N. readies aid for Chile after receiving government request for help

March 1, 2010 |  8:05 am
Chile_quake The United Nations says it will rush aid deliveries to Chile after the government asked for help in its recovery from this weekend's massive earthquake.

U.N. humanitarian spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs says Chile officially made its request Monday, two days after the 8.8-magnitude quake struck about 200 miles south of the capital, Santiago, and killed more than 700 people.

Byrs told the Associated Press that the global body was now "ready to take action." Before the request, international aid groups had sent some funds and experts. But their action was limited as Chilean officials were busy assessing the destruction from the earthquake and the needs of up to 2 million affected people.

-- Associated Press

Photo: A resident walks amid debris in Constitucion, Chile. Credit: Roberto Candia / Associated Press

Chile earthquake: Google's Person Finder tool

March 1, 2010 |  8:04 am

Google's Person Finder for the Chile Earthquake has now reached more than 39,000 records. The U.S. State Department sent out an e-mail with a link to the tool shortly after the quake hit. The same tool was used during the Haiti earthquake and has more than 55,000 records.


Credit: Google Person Finder is an open source, released under the Apache 2.0 License.


Chile earthquake: Not without suffering, Santiago counts its blessings

March 1, 2010 |  7:24 am
Chile_earthquake Along Jasmin Street in this capital's middle-class Villa Olimpica neighborhood, residents were packing up their belongings in trucks Sunday, hauling out furniture, clothing and keepsakes from damaged and unlivable apartments.

Deep cracks and crooked balconies marred the 1960s-era three-story residential buildings along the quiet street, testament to the damage from the massive earthquake that struck Chile early Saturday, stunning the nation.

"It's a lot to deal with, but at least we're all safe," said Carolina Jimenez, 32, a mother of two who was forced to flee her apartment as the quake struck, collapsing a wall and sending furniture flying, slightly injuring her 11-year-old daughter. "It could be a lot worse, like what happened to the poor people in the south."

Most had by now seen television footage of the extreme damage about 125 miles to the south, where the quake and a tsunami killed hundreds of people and left tens of thousands more homeless.

Continue reading Santiago counts its blessings by Patrick J. McDonnell from Santiago, Chile.

Photo: People camp outside their homes in the Yungay neighborhood in Santiago. Credit: Carlos Espinoza / Associated Press

Death toll jumps to 708 from Chile earthquake

February 28, 2010 | 12:30 pm
Chile_earthquake Rescuers searched for survivors Sunday a day after one of the biggest earthquakes in recorded history rocked Chile, killing more than 700 people while leaving untold numbers missing and 2 million displaced, wounded or otherwise affected.

The death toll jumped Sunday to 708, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet said, nearly doubling as rescue crews reached remote and badly damaged towns.

The 8.8 quake, which hit before dawn Saturday, toppled buildings, buckled freeways and set off sirens thousands of miles away as governments scrambled to protect coastal residents from the ensuing tsunami. Authorities lifted tsunami warnings Sunday after smaller-than-feared waves washed shores from Southern California to Hawaii and Japan.

Chile_quake Looting broke out Sunday in some of the most heavily damaged areas of Chile, where residents were without water or electricity. Crowds overran supermarkets in the port city of Concepcion, which sustained widespread damage, and were making off with food, water and diapers but also television sets. Several banks also were hit. Police in armored vehicles sprayed looters with water cannons and made several arrests, mostly of young men.

"The people are desperate and say the only way is to come get stuff for themselves," Concepcion resident Patricio Martinez told reporters. "We have money to buy it, but the big stores are closed, so what are we supposed to do?"

Continue reading: Rescuers search for Chile quake survivors; death toll jumps to 708, by Chris Kraul.

Photos: A man holds up a Chilean flag in Pelluhue, about 200 miles southwest of Santiago. Credit: Roberto Candia / Associated Press. A woman carries bags of toilet paper in the city of Concepcion the day after the huge 8.8-magnitude earthquake. Credit: Daniel Garcia / AFP/Getty Images

Chile earthquake emergency effort not limited by finances, government says

February 28, 2010 | 12:02 pm

Chile's government can pay for the emergency relief effort related to Saturday's earthquake without taking extra budget measures or seeking congressional approval, Finance Minister Andres Velasco said Sunday.

“In this tragedy, this government's response isn't limited by resources because we fully understand the immense needs of the people in Chile,” Velasco said in comments broadcast on national television. “The budget law allows immediate access to the financing, not subject to future measures.”

-- Bloomberg


Worried but well-prepared Japan escapes tsunami damage

February 28, 2010 | 11:21 am
Japan A nervous Japan on Sunday prepared for Godzilla. What it got instead was closer to the car insurance gecko.

Fearing a major tsunami could be triggered by Chile's 8.8-magnitude earthquake, authorities here ordered nearly a quarter of a million households along the island nation's eastern seaboard to evacuate to higher ground.

Disaster workers expected 10-foot waves or larger. Instead, by Sunday evening, only a few insignificant 6-inch to foot-high waves lapped onto Japanese-controlled shores.

"I was watching television all day and I was worried," said Yufuko Goto, a 19-year-old waitress. "They were evacuating people. And I thought that something really big was coming our way."

Continue reading A worried but well-prepared Japan escapes tsunami damage by John M. Glionna.

Photo: Evacuees gather at a shelter in the Japanese town of Minami-sanriku. Credit: Kazuhiro Nogi / AFP / Getty Images

Pacific-wide tsunami alert lifted

February 28, 2010 |  7:04 am
Hokkaido The tsunami from Chile's devastating earthquake hit Japan's main islands and the shores of Russia on Sunday, but the smaller-than-expected waves prompted the lifting of a Pacific-wide alert. Hawaii and other Pacific islands were also spared.

Hundreds of thousands of people fled shorelines for higher ground after the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii warned 53 nations and territories that a tsunami had been generated by Saturday's magnitude-8.8 quake earthquake. After the center lifted its warning, some countries kept their own watches in place as a precaution.

In Japan, the biggest wave hit the northern island of Hokkaido. There were no immediate reports of damage from the 4-foot-high wave, though some piers were briefly flooded.

As it crossed the Pacific, the tsunami dealt populated areas — including the U.S. state of Hawaii — only a glancing blow.

The tsunami raised fears Pacific nations could suffer from disastrous waves like those that killed 230,000 people around the Indian Ocean in December 2004, which happened with little-to-no warning and much confusion about the impending waves.

Continue reading »

Chile earthquake: El Teniente copper complex to resume operations today

February 28, 2010 |  5:35 am
Chile's Codelco, the world's top copper miner, will resume operations at its El Teniente copper complex later today, the mine's manager told Reuters on Sunday, adding that roads to the exporting port of San Antonio were in good condition.

Codelco halted output at the complex on Saturday following a major quake that badly damaged Chilean infrastructure.

--Reuters

Chile earthquake: Pope urges survivors to be courageous

February 28, 2010 |  5:21 am
Pope Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday urged the survivors of Chile's devastating quake to be courageous and asked the Catholic church to play a role in relief efforts.

The pontiff, speaking first in Italian and then in Spanish, told pilgrims in St. Peter's Square that he was praying for the victims.

“My thoughts go to Chile and to the population struck by the earthquake, which has caused much loss of human life and huge damage,” Benedict said.

“I am sure that solidarity won't be lacking,” he said, singling out the local church in that predominantly Roman Catholic country for a role in disaster relief.

“I pray for the victims, and I am spiritually close to those so tried by such a grave calamity,” he said. “For those, I implore God to give them relief from suffering and courage in this adversity.”

Separately, the head of the Chilean bishops conference said the church was offering its help to both local authorities and to volunteer workers.

Continue reading »

Chile earthquake a test for aid agencies

February 28, 2010 |  5:05 am
Disaster relief officials Saturday were faced with a daunting mission, trying to arrange assistance to victims of Chile's massive earthquake while maintaining full-throttle operations in Haiti.

That should not be a problem for large organizations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross, which have the resources to send emergency responders and humanitarian aid to a number of hot spots. But the same may not be true for smaller groups whose focus is on long-term rebuilding efforts.

"Organizations like ours are able to coordinate on multiple disasters," said Red Cross spokesman Eric Porterfield, citing as an example the cyclone in Myanmar and the earthquake in China's Sichuan province in May 2008.

In the month and a half since a magnitude 7 quake devastated Haiti, he said, the Red Cross has raised $322 million for its efforts there. A separate emergency fund could be directed for Chile, Porterfield said.

Continue reading »

Tiny tsunami reaches Japan

February 27, 2010 | 10:58 pm
Boats The first tsunami from the Chilean earthquake hit Japan's outlying islands on Sunday, but while the initial waves were small and most of the Pacific islands already in its path had been spared damage, officials warned a bigger surge could follow.

Japan's Meteorological Agency said the first wave to reach Japan after the magnitude 8.8 quake off Chile was recorded in the Ogasawara islands. It was just 4 inches high. Another, measuring about 12 inches, was observed in Hokkaido, to the north. There were no reports of damage.

As it crossed the Pacific, the tsunami has dealt populated areas — including the U.S. state of Hawaii — just a glancing blow.

But Japan, fearing the tsunami could gain force as it moved closer, put all of its eastern coastline on tsunami alert Sunday and ordered hundreds of thousands of residents in low-lying areas to seek higher ground as waves generated by the Chilean earthquake raced across the Pacific at hundreds of miles per hour.

Japan is particularly sensitive to the tsunami threat.

Continue reading »



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