the nepal earthquake of april 25,2015 part 5: fourth day happenings walter hays, global alliance for...
TRANSCRIPT
THE NEPAL EARTHQUAKE OF APRIL 25,2015
Part 5: Fourth Day Happenings
Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, Vienna, Disaster Reduction, Vienna,
Virginia, USA Virginia, USA
TUESDAY: Day 4 PHOTOSCREDIT: ASSOCIATED
PRESS and THE WORLD POST
These pictures are used only for educational purposes with
zero financial benefit
TUESDAY
NEPAL’S PRIME MINISTER, SUSHI KOIRALA VOWED IN A NATIONALLY TELEVISED ADDRESS TO REBOUND
FROM THE DISASTER, WHICH IMPACTED 8 MILLION+ PEOPLE AND LEFT 1.4 +
MILLION URGENTLY NEEDING FOOD, WATER, MEDICINES, SHELTER, AND
SANITARY FACILITIES; - - -
TUESDAY (continued)
AT LEAST 5,000 PEOPLE DEAD, 8,068 INJURED; PRIME MINISTER SUSHI
KOIRALA SAID THAT THE NUMBER OF DEAD COULD REACH 10,000 AFTER THE
REMOTE VILLAGES AND MOUNTAINSIDES ARE VISITED IN DETAIL; - - -
TUESDAY (continued)
THE GOVERNMENT HAS ESTABLISHED 16 LARGE TENT CAMPS IN KATHMANDU; MANY RSIDENTS CONTINUE SLEEPING IN THE STREETS OR IN OPEN SPACES AWAY
FROM DAMAGED BUILDINGS AND WALLS; .
TUESDAY (continued)
HUNDREDS OF GLOBAL EMERGENCY SERVICES, CHARITIES, DISASTER RELIEF
AGENCIES, AND VOLUNTEERS ARE DOING THEIR BEST TO HELP THE PEOPLE
IMPACTED BY THE DISASTER;
TUESDAY (continued)
“S AND R” SURGES AS “GOLDEN 48 HOUR PERIOD ENDS AND INTERNATIONAL
EXPERTS FROM 12 COUNTRIES ARRIVE TO ASSIST LOCAL PROFESSIONALS WITH “S AND R” AND DISTRIBUTION OF AID;
TUESDAY (continued)
SNOW, RAIN, AFTERSHOCKS, AND A MUDSLIDE THAT DEVESTATED A REMOTE
VILLAGE (Ghodatabela),CONTINUED TO HINDER OPERATIONS;
TUESDAY (continued)
UNITED NATIONS DISASTER ASSISTANCE FUND RELEASES $15 MILLION; WORLD
FOOD PROGRAM BEGINS DISTRIBUTION, BUT HINDERED BY RAIN AND
LANDSLIDES.
TUESDAY (continued)
BAD NEWS FOR THE FUTURE: Earthquake experts say Saturday's earthquake did not release all of the pent-up seismic pressure
in the region near Kathmandu. According to GPS monitoring and geologic studies, some 33 to 50 feet (10 to 15 meters) of motion may
still need to be released, said Eric Kirby, a geologist at Oregon State University.
SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 2015
• A massive block of the Earth’s crust, roughly 125 km (75 miles) long and 61 km (37 miles) wide, lurched 3 m (10 feet) to the south Saturday over the course of 30 seconds. Riding atop this block of the crust was the capital of Nepal — Kathmandu — and millions of Nepalese.
SUNDAY
CAPITAL DEVASTATED; AFTERSHOCKS CONTINUE; AT LEAST 2,500 PEOPLE
DEAD; AT LEAST 6,400 INJURED; THOUSANDS NEEDING SHELTER, FOOD, AND WATER; AVALANCHES; “S AND R” OPERATIONS ENERGIZED AND INTER-NATIONAL AID PLEDGED, BUT BOTH HINDERED BY A M6.7 AFTERSHOCK
USA, India, Sri Lanka. China, Pakistan and
European Union countries are among those who have
pledged money and assistance.
SUNDAY
• Nepal’s capital has become a tent city, as thousands of displaced residents stayed overnight in their dark gardens or out on the rubble-littered streets, afraid to go back inside because of aftershocks that exacerbated existing damage, triggered new avalanches on Mount Everest, and hindered search and rescue operations and all aspects of life.
MONDAY
NEPAL: SHORT ON SHELTER, FUEL, FOOD, WATER, MEDICINES, POWER,
TENTS, BLANKETS, TARPS, SANITARY FACILITIES, CASH, and WORKERS; - - -
MONDAY (continued)
AT LEAST 4,000 PEOPLE DEAD, 7,180 INJURED; “S AND R” CONTINUES AS NEW
INTERNATIONAL EXPERTS ARRIVE TO ASSIST IN STRICKEN CITIES AND ON MT
EVEREST; ROADS AND TRAILS BLOCKED BY LANDSLIDES; AFTERSHOCKS
CONTINUE.
MONDAY (continued): LIFE ALMOST SHUT DOWN
• Schools remained closed, most businesses were shuttered, banks were closed and ATMs lacked electricity to dispense cash.
• Long lines of motorcycles and cars formed at the few gas stations that had fuel.
MONDAY (continued): LIFE ALMOST SHUT DOWN
• The entire Katmandu Valley is suffering from drinking water shortages due to power outages and severe damage to utility pipelines.
MONDAY (continued): LIFE ALMOST SHUT DOWN
• Phone lines are down throughout the city, cellphone service is spotty and Internet access is still limited.
MONDAY (continued):STATUS OF “S AND R” and RELIEF
• Forty-eight hours after the M7.8 earthquake, rescue and relief workers have yet to reach numerous remote mountain villages, where some reports have suggested that 70% or more of the homes have been reduced to heaps of rubble and survivors need all the basics.
MONDAY (continued): LIFE ALMOST SHUT DOWN
• Rumors abound every where that a bigger earthquake is on the way, creating additional concern.
SLEEPING OUTSIDE AGAIN
• Tens of thousands of families slept outdoors for a second night, fearful of aftershocks that have not ceased. Camped in parks, open squares and a golf course, they cuddled children or pets against chilly Himalayan nighttime temperatures.
SOUNDS ON MONDAY MORNING
• As the dawn light crawled across toppled building sites, volunteers and rescue workers carefully shifted broken concrete slabs and crumbled bricks mixed together with humble household items: pots and pans; a purple notebook decorated with butterflies; a framed poster of a bodybuilder; so many shoes.
Nearing exhaustion, nearly the entire 100,000-member Nepalese soldier army is involved in search and
rescue operations.
The work is slow also because many workers — water tanker drivers, electricity company
employees and laborers needed to clear debris— have gone to their families and are
staying to help them.
Many roads and trails have been blocked by landslides,
and the airport has been overwhelmed or closed;
hindering travel, work, and arrival of international workers
and relief supplies.
LESSON: THE KNOWLEDGE AND TIMING OF ANTICIPATORY ACTIONS IS VITAL
• The people who know: 1) what to expect (e.g., strong ground motion, damage, collapses, trapped survivors), 2) where and why they will happen, and 3) what they should (and should not) do to cope with them will survive.
LESSON: TIMELY, REALISTIC DISASTER SCENARIOS SAVE LIVES
• The people who have timely, realistic, advance information that facilitates reduction of vulnerabilities, and hence the risks associated with strong ground shaking, ground failure, and building collapses will survive.
LESSON: EMERGENCY RESPONSE SAVES LIVES
• The “Uncontrollable and Unthinkable” events will always hinder the timing of emergency response operations, especially the search and rescue operations that need to be complished within “the golden 48 hours.”
LESSON: EMERGENCY MEDICAL PREPAREDNESS SAVES LIVES
• The local community’s capacity for emergency health care (i,e., coping with damaged hospitals and medical facilities, lack of clean drinking water, food, and medicine, and high levels of morbidity and mortality) is vital for survival.
LESSON: EARTHQUAKE ENGINEERED BUILDINGS SAVE LIVES
• Buildings engineered to withstand the risks from an earthquake’s strong ground shaking and ground failure that cause damage, collapse, and loss of function, is vital for protecting occupants and users from death and injury.
LESSON: THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY ALWAYS PROVIDES AID
• The International Community provides millions to billions of dollars in relief to help “pick up the pieces, ” but this strategy is not enough by itself to ensure earthquake disaster resilience.
FACTMOST OF THE 200 + NATIONS
NEED EARTHQUAKE DISASTER RESILIENCE POLICIES THAT ARE BASED ON LESSONS LEARNED
FROM PAST EARTHQUAKE DISASTER LABORATORIES
YOUR YOUR
COMMUNITYCOMMUNITY
YOUR YOUR
COMMUNITYCOMMUNITYDATA BASES DATA BASES AND INFORMATIONAND INFORMATIONDATA BASES DATA BASES AND INFORMATIONAND INFORMATION
HAZARDS: GROUND SHAKING GROUND FAILURE SURFACE FAULTING TECTONIC DEFORMATION TSUNAMI RUN UP AFTERSHOCKS
•MONITORING•HAZARD MAPS•INVENTORY•VULNERABILITY•LOCATION
RISK
ACCEPTABLE RISK
UNACCEPTABLE RISK
BOOKS OF KNOWLEDGE BOOKS OF KNOWLEDGE
•PREPAREDNESS•PROTECTION•EM RESPONSE•RECOSTRUCTION AND RECOVERY
EARTHQUAKE DISASTER EARTHQUAKE DISASTER RESILIENCERESILIENCE
PILLARS OF EARTHQUAKE DISASTER RESILIENCE
Preparedness
Protection: Adoption and Implementation of a Modern Earthquake Engineering Building Code
and Lifeline Standards
Prevention: Land Use Planning and Base Isolation
PILLARS OF EARTHQUAKE DISASTER RESILIENCE (continued)
Monitoring
Realistic Earthquake Disaster Scenarios
Timely Emergency Response (including search and Rescue and Emergency Medical Services)
Cost-Effective Recovery and Reconstruction
THE CHALLENGE:
CHANGING EXISTING POLICIES:
CREATE, ADJUST, AND REALIGN PROGRAMS, PARTNERS AND PEOPLE UNTIL YOU HAVE CREATED THE KINDS OF TURNING POINTS NEEDED FOR MOVING TOWARDS EARTHQUAKE DISASTER RESILIENCE
AN UNDER-UTILIZED GLOBAL STRATEGY
To Create Turning Points for Earthquake Disaster Resilience
USING EDUCATIONAL SURGES CONTAINING THE PAST AND PRESENT LESSONS TO FOSTER
AND ACCELERATE POLICY CHANGES AND IMPROVE PREPAREDNESS PLANNING
MOVING TOWARDS THE MUST-HAPPEN GLOBAL STRATEGY
To Achieve Earthquake Disaster Resilience
INTEGRATION OF SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL SOLUTIONS WITH POLITICAL
SOLUTIONS IN EVERY NATION FOR REALISTIC POLICIES ON PREPAREDNESS,
PROTECTION, DISASTER SCENARIOS, EMERGENCY RESPONSE,
RECONSTRUCTION, AND RECOVERY