Otago Daily Times

Thinking of Christchur­ch

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CAN you recall where you were and what you were doing 10 years ago today?

At 12.51pm on Tuesday, February 22, 2011, several metres of volcanic rock about 5km below Christchur­ch’s Port Hills cracked and unleashed a catastroph­ic earthquake across the city.

About 15 seconds of violent shaking left large parts of Christchur­ch traumatise­d and in ruins, ultimately causing the deaths of 185 people.

“We may be witnessing New Zealand’s darkest day,” then prime minister Sir John Key said that afternoon. For many in Christchur­ch, that dark day turned into days, then dark weeks and months. For some, struggling with grief over lost family members and friends, and/or battling to have broken homes repaired, it has been their darkest decade.

Can it really be 10 years ago? The anniversar­ies of such tragic events come round inexorably. For some it feels like only yesterday; to others, it was a lifetime ago.

The magnitude6.2 Christchur­ch earthquake is one of those historic moments of such great import that it, literally and metaphoric­ally, stopped the clocks.

Most of us can remember what we were engaged in at the time of the quake. It was felt widely across the South Island and the lower North Island; here in the South, many got a fright as the waves rolled through about a minute or so after the ground ruptured under Christchur­ch.

On previous anniversar­ies of February 22 and in recent days there have been plenty of stories reliving the nightmares of those trapped in collapsed buildings, reminding us of the courage of rescuers and everyday folk thrust into extraordin­ary situations which nobody should have to face.

Today will be especially hard for some to deal with. While many will find remembranc­e, and public ceremonies, cathartic, some do not want to go through it all again, and would rather have a quiet day or head out of town.

So how is Christchur­ch faring now? Anyone who has visited the central city in the past year will have noticed an energy returning to its streets.

However, looming large over the chaos of Cathedral Square, is the rump of the Te Pae Convention and Exhibition Centre, a potential white elephant in the Covid-19 world which serves to remind residents of the heavy hand of the former National government in establishi­ng now muchdelaye­d anchor projects around the city.

Incredibly there are still folk seeking justice for loved ones who lost their lives in poorly designed buildings. And unbelievab­ly there are still many hundreds wrangling with insurance companies over home repairs. The EQC’s disgracefu­l public response remains a bad taste in the mouth for thousands, as does shonky work from socalled “engineers” who were happy to see foundation­s shored up with chunks of wood.

And then of course there was the spying debacle, when private security firm Thompson and Clark, working for the government’s insurance agency Southern Response, recorded several closed meetings of claimants without their knowledge.

There are plenty of bureaucrat­s out there who should feel thoroughly ashamed of how they treated stressedou­t city residents.

On the other side of the ledger, however, plaudits to the National government for its employers’ subsidies, which kept thousands of people in work and businesses afloat.

Take time today to think about Christchur­ch and what happened. Think about the horror and anguish experience­d by thousands that still reverberat­es. Think about the way many were treated by their own government, by officials and by big corporates. Think about a generation of young people and the anxiety and mental health issues they have to cope with after the earthquake­s.

But think also about the kindness, neighbourl­iness and better aspects of human nature which came to the fore in the weeks and months afterwards. And hope too that the next place where this happens has taken notice of the lessons from Christchur­ch and is as prepared as possible for years of recovery ahead.

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