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SPECIAL REPORTS
- Monday
09 January 2005
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LATIN
AMERICA:
Region Unprepared for Eventual
Tsunami Threat
Diego
Cevallos
MEXICO CITY, (IPS) - Almost none
of the Latin American countries
with coastlines are prepared to
confront a tsunami, although
experts warn that the region
could possibly face a disaster
similar to the one that struck
Asia in late December.
The tsunami caused by a massive
undersea earthquake in the
Indian Ocean on Dec. 26 claimed
over 150,000 lives and caused
overwhelming destruction to
countries in South and Southeast
Asia, as well as Africa.
Carlos Pullinger, director of
the Geological Service of El
Salvador, told IPS, "The threat
of a tsunami is viewed as
relatively minor in Latin
America, when in fact, it is
not. Hopefully, what happened in
Asia will put pressure on the
region's governments to create
warning systems and educate the
population."
The danger is posed by the
tectonic plates off the Pacific
coast of Latin America, from
Mexico to Chile, and others in
the Caribbean. If these were to
shift and generate a quake
measuring more than 8.0 on the
Richter scale, the region could
be lashed by killer waves with
the same destructive force as
those that hit Asia.
Reports gathered by IPS from
throughout Latin America
indicate that the Asian tsunami
claimed the lives of at least
two Argentines, two Brazilians,
two Chileans and two Mexicans.
There are also 138 people from
various countries of the region
who are missing and being sought
in the disaster zone.
To support the rescue efforts in
Asia and to help in the search
for their citizens, a number of
Latin American governments -
most of whom believe it is
unlikely that their own
countries could be hit by a
similar catastrophe - have sent
different kinds of aid.
Brazil sent two planes carrying
over 70 tons of food, medicines
and water, while Chile
dispatched a team of six
doctors, dentists and paramedics
to help with the identification
of bodies and provide treatment
for survivors.
In addition, the Brazilian and
Chilean foreign ministries,
along with those of most of the
other countries of the region,
offered special consular
services to assist those
affected by the disaster.
Mexico has contributed 18 rescue
workers and experts in disease
control, civil engineering and
risk analysis, while Venezuela
has pledged two million dollars
in aid for the victims, to be
disbursed through the United
Nations.
"We can only hope that Latin
America will never suffer
anything similar to December's
tsunami, but the governments of
the region should be fully aware
that the possibility always
exists, and we have to be
prepared," warned Pullinger.
With the exception of Chile and
Nicaragua, the Latin American
countries most affected by
tsunamis in the 20th century,
none of the nations in this
region are prepared for an
emergency of this kind, or
equipped with advanced systems
to detect underwater tremors and
quakes. Instead, they depend
almost exclusively on the
Pacific Tsunami Warning System,
based in Hawaii.
The warning system, run by
specialists from the United
States, comprises dozens of
censors and seismographs
throughout the Pacific Ocean. If
a quake sufficient to trigger a
tsunami is detected, warnings
are sent to the countries that
could potentially be affected.
Historical evidence indicates
that the risk of a tsunami is
relatively minor in comparison
with the frequency of
earthquakes, volcanic eruptions
and hurricanes, but it is a
potential threat that cannot be
ignored, given the location of
the tectonic plates in the
Pacific Ocean, said Pullinger.
Roughly 116,000 people have been
killed in Latin America and the
Caribbean over the last 30 years
as a result of tectonic and
geological movements, according
to studies by the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP).
While most of these deaths were
caused by earthquakes, they also
include the 116 lives claimed by
a 1992 tsunami in Nicaragua,
which left many thousands
homeless.
In 1990, the countries of
Central America proposed the
creation of a regional tsunami
warning network, but their plans
have yet to come to fruition,
"because of a lack of
resources," noted Pullinger. It
was only this last July, he
added, that El Salvador
installed a tidal monitoring
station connected to the Pacific
Tsunami Warning System.
After the catastrophic Indian
Ocean tsunami, the initiative to
establish a Central American
warning network appears to have
been revived, Pullinger said.
Meanwhile, in the Caribbean,
officials from the Caribbean
Disaster Emergency Response
Agency (CDERA) announced that
they are also looking into the
possibility of establishing a
tsunami warning network.
Eduardo Camacho, director of the
Panamanian National Civil
Protection System's Geoscience
Institute, said that if an
earthquake severe enough to set
off tsunami waves were to happen
today, "there is very little we
could do to prevent a disaster
of enormous proportions."
In the case of an underwater
earthquake, the governments of
the region could be informed -
although somewhat belatedly - by
the Pacific Tsunami Warning
System, but they would be unable
to implement any kind of
evacuation plan, because these
simply do not exist, Camacho
told IPS.
Almost all of the region's
countries with Pacific
coastlines have equipment to
detect seabed movement, and the
majority are connected to the
Pacific Tsunami Warning System.
However, only Nicaragua and
Chile have the high-precision
censors needed to effectively
trigger the pertinent alarms.
For Pullinger, the installation
and coordination of underwater
seismic measuring equipment is
an urgent necessity,
particularly in Central America.
Nevertheless, he added, it would
not be the most difficult need
to fulfil.
"From a technical point of view,
we can make progress fairly
rapidly, but what is still
greatly lacking, and hasn't even
been addressed in some cases, is
a programme for educating the
public about tsunamis and
implementing warning and
evacuation systems, especially
in coastal communities," he
said.
*Additional reporting by Marcela
Valente (Argentina), Mario Osava
(Brazil), Patricia Grogg (Cuba),
Gustavo González (Chile) and
Humberto Márquez (Venezuela) |
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