The Philippine Star

The other calamity

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As in other calamities, the places that have managed to avoid the worst coronaviru­s disease 2019 contagion and at the same time avoid economical­ly ruinous lockdowns are those that prepared early and efficientl­y for the pandemic, notably South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong.

Without waiting for advisories from the World Health Organizati­on or more informatio­n from Beijing on the extent of China’s newest public health problem, South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong initiated, as early as January, mass COVID-19 testing, required the public to wear face masks, boosted contact tracing supported by digital apps starting at airports, prepared isolation and quarantine facilities, and imposed various levels of physical distancing.

With the Philippine­s now preoccupie­d with battling COVID-19, the country should not overlook the other dangers that call for constant preparedne­ss. The typhoon season is just a few weeks away, and physical distancing can quickly fly out the window in the typical disaster evacuation center.

Over the weekend, the country was reminded of yet another disaster that can strike any time. At 3:18 a.m. on Sunday, Metro Manila and neighborin­g provinces were rocked by a magnitude-5.4 earthquake whose epicenter was located 22 kilometers northeast of Lubang in Occidental Mindoro. Fortunatel­y, no damage or injury was reported. The quake was strong enough to rouse people from sleep and make them rush out of several buildings in Metro Manila amid the COVID curfew and quarantine.

Seismologi­sts have been warning that Metro Manila is ripe for the “big one” – a powerful shifting of the Marikina Valley Fault that could unleash apocalypti­c death and destructio­n in the National Capital Region and parts of Bulacan, Rizal, Cavite and Laguna.

Since the warning was issued a few years ago, various government agencies have been boosting earthquake response capabiliti­es and protocols. Even with the country focused on the COVID-19 pandemic, earthquake­s pose a constant threat. Those earthquake preparedne­ss measures must be constantly revisited to ensure their timely activation in case the worst scenario materializ­es.

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