Peru Heartquake

For issues related to countries in Latin America

Moderator: Vega

Peru Heartquake

Postby Elba » Sat Aug 18, 2007 11:06 pm

A big heartquake take places in one of our brothers country, PERU.
And I pray Lalee and his famili be OK. If someone know somethin about her, please give us information.

If you want to help people fron Perú in this terrible situation, please click on the link:

http://networkforgood.blogspot.com/2007 ... ctims.html

I give you this link because maybe in your country nobody has created a bank accounto to help them. If there is one place where you can send your support omit to visit the link.

This is the last information I got about Peru

PISCO, Peru (AFP) - Anger brewed Saturday among thousands of shocked survivors of the massive earthquake in Peru that killed more than 500 people, with tempers fraying over the slow distribution of emergency supplies.

Amid increasing reports of looting and assaults, President Alan Garcia ordered more troops to the quake-stricken area and promised that authorities would maintain the peace "whatever the cost."

At an air force base in the coastal town of Pisco -- the area hardest hit by the quake, located some 240 kilometers (150 miles) south-east of Lima -- Health Minister Carlos Vallejos insisted that aid was getting through but conceded there were problems.

"We have to perfect the problem of aid," he said, adding that some 1,500 physicians and nurses in the stricken area were concentrating on preventing the spread of epidemic diseases.

On the third day after the massive 8.0 magnitude earthquake quake struck Wednesday, the official toll remained at 500 and more than 1,600 injured.

But the number of missing is still unknown, and lacking official figures, news media estimate the number of people affected by the quake at 200,000.

A ray of hope fell on Pisco Saturday with the birth of a baby in a field hospital set up in the city's main square. Garcia took the baby in his arms calling it "a breath of life ... a miracle amid crumbling walls and the pain."

Garcia arrived Friday in Pisco, the scene of some of the worst devastation. Some two-thirds of the city of 130,000 was destroyed, leaving thousands homeless and an unknown number of dead still beneath the rubble of collapsed homes, shops and other buildings.

"Everyone is exposed to the elements," said a 30 year-old father named Antonio, who spent the night in Pisco sleeping outside in chilly 10 degrees Celsius (50 Fahrenheit) night-time temperatures.

"Think about the children. We have many needs and the aid is not arriving."

In Pisco desperate survivors tried to raid a food store. The mob was chased off when the owners fired their weapons into the air.

Mobs looted trucks carrying food and water, and some people tried to break into the air force base where relief efforts have been centralized.

Hours later close to the provincial capital of Ica, another mob tried to raid a convoy of trucks carrying emergency supplies.

In nearby Chincha, soldiers broke up a mob of men and women armed with broomsticks that tried to break into a warehouse filled with emergency supplies. A crowd of 2,000 gathered in the main square to berate officials who were unable to tell them when help would arrive.

At the Pisco air base, Garcia said he was determined to prevent chaos.

"My obligation is to impose order, and order we will impose today, whatever the cost," he said, after the defense minister announced that some 1,000 soldiers were being sent to the region, in addition to nearly 2,000 police officers that have already deployed.

If preventive measures were not enough, "then energetic and physical order shall be imposed," said the president.

Adding to the distress were reports that more than 600 dangerous inmates who escaped from a collapsed prison in nearby Chincha remain on the loose.

Aftershocks continued to keep people on edge. Peru's geophysical institute reported more than 400 tremors following the quake, which was the most devastating to hit the country since 1970.

Health Minister Vallejos said his attentions were now turning to the physical and mental health issues, and he warned of the risk of infectious diseases in the quake-stricken areas -- respiratory problems, tetanus and diarhhea.

"The problem is not only that there are still unfound bodies, the problem is water," and how human waste is being disposed, he said.

Vallejos said that battlefield hospitals have opened at the base, including one from the US army. A Mexican military hospital ship was also due to arrive, he said.

Among many nations offering personnel and other aid in the rescue operation, a US embassy official said 22 US doctors had already set up a field hospital in Pisco's stadium, and a plane loaded with humanitarian goods was scheduled to arrive late Saturday.

Coordination among all the various organisations and with various Peruvian agencies was "proving to be a challenge," she said, declining to be identified.

She added that she was nonetheless "impressed by what the Peruvian government has done in the past 48 hours," pointing to the efficient process of identifying the bodies still being found, putting them in coffins and handing them over to families for burial.

On Friday a Peruvian navy tanker vessel with a million gallons of drinking water arrived at Pisco's port.

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe meanwhile ordered a Colombian naval ship to sail from the Pacific port of Buenaventura to Pisco on Sunday carrying relief supplies. Colombia had already sent two planeloads totalling 40 tonnes of aid to Peru.
Elba
Rough Diamond Member
 
Posts: 1756
Joined: Wed Sep 22, 2004 1:51 am
Location: México
Status: English Learner

Postby Oriani » Sat Aug 18, 2007 11:34 pm

It was horrible!! Venezuela is helping a lot! Some friend of mine have suffered from that :cry:
User avatar
Oriani
Miss EnglishClub.com 2007
Miss EnglishClub.com 2007
 
Posts: 2516
Joined: Fri Feb 18, 2005 6:44 pm
Status: English Teacher

Postby mr_Love » Sun Aug 19, 2007 6:20 am

i'm so sorry for them....


so how is Lali ???
User avatar
mr_Love
Polished Diamond Member
 
Posts: 2095
Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2004 10:43 am

Postby Oriani » Sun Aug 19, 2007 6:06 pm

mr_Love wrote:i'm so sorry for them....


so how is Lali ???


Oh God! We must write to her!!!
User avatar
Oriani
Miss EnglishClub.com 2007
Miss EnglishClub.com 2007
 
Posts: 2516
Joined: Fri Feb 18, 2005 6:44 pm
Status: English Teacher

Postby ERPS » Mon Aug 20, 2007 1:56 am

It really shook me too! Central America was in Tsunami Red Alert during about 2 or 3 hours, but it was nothing compared to what took place in Pisco... oh my god! It was awful...
ERPS
Silver Member
 
Posts: 52
Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2007 5:16 pm
Location: Costa Rica

Postby Elba » Wed Aug 22, 2007 12:18 am

Sorry Prince,

I don´t know nothing about Lalee. I hope she and her family would be Ok. I pray for that.
Elba
Rough Diamond Member
 
Posts: 1756
Joined: Wed Sep 22, 2004 1:51 am
Location: México
Status: English Learner

Postby bellota » Thu Sep 13, 2007 10:39 pm

I think there's a big tragedy in Costa Rica the earthquake make a tsunami alert for the Puntarenas Province, the people in that province evacuated and the alert were cover very well and the tsunami didn't came but Costa Rica was prepare.
bellota
New Member
 
Posts: 4
Joined: Thu Sep 13, 2007 10:14 pm
Location: Heredia-Costa Rica

Postby Elba » Fri Sep 14, 2007 12:36 am

Too much natural phenomena is taking place in our world, and a big number of them are produced for the global warming. We must to think seriously in what to do about it.
I know there is a big responsability of the governments, but this is too a esa way to let out our responsability.
Whym because all day we use items than make our world more and more warm.

One of the first thing I suggest is "prevention", as in your country Bellota, people "prevent".

Particulary I´m taking some messurments, one of them take a cold shower. Firstable I didn´t like. I had the idea that only with hot watter I got clean. but this is unreal. Well at México the weather is warm, but when it is rainning sometimes is too cold.
What do you think about it??
Elba
Rough Diamond Member
 
Posts: 1756
Joined: Wed Sep 22, 2004 1:51 am
Location: México
Status: English Learner

Postby edumelo » Fri Sep 14, 2007 8:49 pm

Well, here in Brazil we don't have huricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis, volcanos and those kind of disasters (thanks God). But the weather is very, very dry these days and we are suffering with wildfires in the forests of the whole country. And the air pollution is also a problem in the big cities. We know this is because the global warming, but the big problem is how to stop it? :?
User avatar
edumelo
Gold Member
 
Posts: 293
Joined: Fri Nov 11, 2005 5:22 pm
Location: São Paulo, Brasil
Status: English Learner

Postby Danyet » Fri Sep 14, 2007 10:33 pm

Ooohhhhh! Global Warming - The big boogey man!!!! Do you guys have any idea how silly you sound?
User avatar
Danyet
Keeper of the Board
Keeper of the Board
 
Posts: 2378
Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2004 2:29 am
Location: USA
Status: English Teacher

Next

Return to Latin America

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest