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Disaster experts praise Chile quake response

AP

Thursday, March 11, 2010



SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -- President Michelle Bachelet leaves office today with a chunk of her country in ruins -- and her popularity in the clouds.

Despite complaints that aid was slow to reach the hungry and homeless, experts say that Chile's response to one of history's most powerful earthquakes has been a model for disaster recovery.

At first, the problems were all too obvious: Chile's navy and emergency preparedness office failed to issue a tsunami warning that might have saved hundreds of lives after the February27 quake, and Bachelet didn't order soldiers to impose order in the streets until after looting had spun out of control.

But experts say other smart moves -- like insisting that foreign help meet specific needs, quickly patching up roads and having the military handle logistics -- made it possible to deliver 12,000 tons of relief in just 10 days.

And despite extensive damage to hospitals, few additional lives have been lost since the tsunami retreated, leaving at least 497 dead and hundreds missing.

Chile's critical north-south highway was restored the day after the quake, with thick metal plates covering cracks, dump-truck loads of gravel filling collapsed pavement and more than a dozen fallen pedestrian overpasses quickly pushed aside. The patchwork repairs soon enabled an aid convoy of 100 tractor-trailers to make the eight-hour journey south from the capital to the most damaged cities.

"We were where we needed to be immediately," the socialist president said in a Chilean TV interview ahead of Thursday's inauguration of conservative billionaire Sebastian Pinera.

It was frustrating to have to make decisions based on incomplete information, Bachelet said: Seismographs were knocked offline when the power went out, the navy gave mixed signals on the tsunami, and she said there was no hint that looting would soon begin when she toured the disaster area hours after the quake. Chile clearly needs to improve its emergency communications and warning systems, she said.

But veterans of other disasters have been impressed by Chile's response.

"There is nothing more frustrating than getting aid somewhere and not seeing it delivered to the people who need it. Here, there is no aid that sits anywhere. It hasn't collected any dust. It's getting exactly to the people," said Colonel Julio Lopez, who commands the the US Air Force's 35th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron, which has been ferrying supplies and people in C-130 cargo planes between Chile's capital and Concepcion, the closest large city to the epicenter.

Ten days after the quake, more than 90 percent of homes in the disaster area have regular power and water and a half-million survivors are getting water trucked in. Food aid is flowing in huge cargo planes and military helicopters, navy ships and tractor-trailers.

Countless volunteers have turned out to help the 14,000 soldiers who stand guard and help deliver relief, and a national telethon raised $60 million -- enough to build small emergency shelters for most of the poorest survivors whose homes were destroyed.

The magnitude-8.8 earthquake that struck just off Chile's coast was more than 500 times more powerful than the 7.0 quake that devastated Haiti. It was so strong that it shifted the Earth's orbit and moved Concepcion 10 feet to the west, scientists say.

And yet Chile's infrastructure and modern buildings designed to withstand a magnitude-9 earthquake emerged largely intally feared," said Raul Rivera, chairman of the Innovation Forum, which promotes economic development in Chile.


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