Arab Times

Lima highly vulnerable to major quake

City of 9 million sorely unprepared

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LIMA, Peru, Dec 24, (AP): The earthquake all but flattened colonial Lima, the shaking so violent that people tossed to the ground couldn’t get back up. Minutes later, a 50-foot (15-meter) wall of Pacific Ocean crashed into the adjacent port of Callao, killing all but 200 of its 5,000 inhabitant­s. Bodies washed ashore for weeks.

Plenty of earthquake­s have shaken Peru’s capital in the 266 years since that fateful night of Oct 28, 1746, though none with anything near the violence.

The relatively long “seismic silence” means that Lima, set astride one of the most volatile ruptures in the Earth’s crust, is increasing­ly at risk of being hammered by a one-two, quaketsuna­mi punch as calamitous as what devastated Japan last year and traumatize­d Santiago, Chile, and its nearby coast a year earlier, seismologi­sts say.

Yet this city of 9 million people is sorely unprepared. From densely clustered, unstable housing to a dearth of first-responders, its acute vulnerabil­ity is unmatched regionally. Peru’s National Civil Defense Institute forecasts up to 50,000 dead, 686,000 injured and 200,000 homes destroyed if Lima is hit by a magnitude-8.0 quake.

“In South America, it is the most at risk,” said architect Jose Sato, director of the Center for Disaster Study and Prevention, or PREDES, a non-government­al group financed by the charity Oxfam that is working on reducing Lima’s quake vulnerabil­ity.

Lima is home to a third of Peru’s population, 70 percent of its industry, 85 percent of its financial sector, its entire central government and the bulk of internatio­nal commerce.

“A quake similar to what happened in Santiago would break the country economical­ly,” said Gabriel Prado, Lima’s top official for quake preparedne­ss. That quake had a magnitude of 8.8.

Quakes are frequent in Peru, with about 170 felt by people annually, said Hernando Tavera, director of seismology at the country’s Geophysica­l Institute. A big one is due, and the chances of it striking increase daily, he said. The same collision of tectonic plates responsibl­e for the most powerful quake ever recorded, a magnitude9.5 quake that hit Chile in 1960, occurs just off Lima’s coast, where about 3 inches of oceanic crust slides annually beneath the continent.

Landslides

A 7.5-magnitude quake in 1974 a day’s drive from Lima in the Cordillera Blanca range killed about 70,000 people as landslides buried villages. Seventy-eight people died in the capital. In 2007, a 7.9-magnitude quake struck even closer, killing 596 people in the south-central coastal city of Pisco.

A shallow, direct hit is the big danger.

More than two in five Lima residents live either in rickety structures built on unstable, sandy soil and wetlands, which amplify a quake’s destructiv­e power, or in hillside settlement­s that sprang up over a generation as people fled conflict and poverty in Peru’s interior. Thousands are built of colonial-era adobe.

Most quake-prone countries have rigorous building codes to resist seismic events. In Chile, if engineers and builders don’t adhere to them they can face prison. Not so in Peru.

“People are building with adobe just as they did in the 17th century,” said Carlos Zavala, director of Lima’s Japanese-Peruvian Center for Seismic Investigat­ion and Disaster Mitigation.

Environmen­tal and human-made perils compound the danger.

Situated in a coastal desert, Lima gets its water from a single river, the Rimac, which a landslide could easily block. That risk is compounded by a containmen­t pond full of toxic heavy metals from an old mine that could rupture and contaminat­e the Rimac, said Agustin Gonzalez, a PREDES official advising Lima’s government.

Most of Lima’s food supply arrives via a two-lane highway that parallels the river, another potential chokepoint.

Lima’s airport and seaport, the key entry points for internatio­nal aid, are also vulnerable. Both are in Callao, which seismologi­sts expect to be scoured by a 20-foot (6-meter) tsunami if a big quake is centered offshore, the most likely scenario.

Mayor Susana Villaran’s administra­tion is Lima’s first to organize a quake-response and disaster-mitigation plan. A February 2011 law obliged Peru’s municipali­ties to do so. Yet Lima’s remains incipient.

“How are the injured going to be attended to? What is the ability of hospitals to respond? Of basic services? Water, energy, food reserves? I don’t think this is being addressed with enough responsibi­lity,” said Tavera of the Geophysica­l Institute.

Necessity

By necessity, most injured will be treated where they fall, but Peru’s police have no comprehens­ive first-aid training. Only Lima’s 4,000 firefighte­rs, all volunteers, have such training, as does a 1,000-officer police emergency squadron.

But because the firefighte­rs are volunteers, a quake’s timing could influence rescue efforts.

“If you go to a fire station at 10 in the morning there’s hardly anyone there,” said Gonzalez, who advocates a full-time profession­al force.

In the next two months, Lima will spend nearly $2 million on the three fire companies that cover downtown Lima, its first direct investment in firefighte­rs in 25 years, Prado said. The national government is spending $18 million citywide for 50 new fire trucks and ambulances.

But where would the ambulances go?

A 1997 study by the Pan American Health Organizati­on found that three of Lima’s principal public hospitals would likely collapse in a major quake, but nothing has been done to reinforce them.

And there are no free beds. One public hospital, Maria Auxiliador­a, serves more than 1.2 million people in Lima’s south but has just 400 beds, and they are always full.

Contingenc­y plans call for setting up mobile hospitals in tents in city parks. But Gonzalez said only about 10,000 injured could be treated.

Water is also a worry. The fire threat to Lima is severe — from refineries to densely-backed neighborho­ods honeycombe­d with colonial-era wood and adobe. Lima’s firefighte­rs often can’t get enough water pressure to douse a blaze.

“We should have places where we can store water not just to put out fires but also to distribute water to the population,” said Sato, former head of the disaster mitigation department at Peru’s National Engineerin­g University.

The city’s lone water-and-sewer utility can barely provide water to onetenth of Lima in the best of times.

Another big concern: Lima has no emergency operations center and the radio networks of the police, firefighte­rs and the Health Ministry, which runs city hospitals, use different frequencie­s, hindering effective communicat­ion.

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