Top Stories - Google News

Showing posts with label survivors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label survivors. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Official: No chance of more NZ quake survivors (AP)

WELLINGTON, New Zealand – New Zealand declared the effort to find anyone else alive in the rubble of last week's massive earthquake to be over Thursday, saying no one who was trapped could have survived this long.

Families of more than 200 people listed as missing after the quake devastated the southern city of Christchurch on Feb. 22 had been holding out hope that a remarkable survival story would yet emerge. Officials say many of those listed as missing are among 161 bodies recovered but that have not yet been identified.

"We now face the reality that there is no chance that anyone could have survived this long, and efforts have to shift to the recovery of loved ones and their return to their families," Civil Defense Emergency Management national controller John Hamilton told a news conference Thursday.

"As time has gone on, the chance of finding someone alive has diminished and, sadly, there becomes a point where the response effort shifts in focus from rescue to body recovery," he said. "We have now reached that point."

Among the missing and presumed dead are dozens of foreigners, most of them students and staff of an English language school that was in an office building that collapsed completely in the disaster.

Rescuers pulled 70 people from the rubble in the first 26 hours after the quake struck just before 1 p.m. on Feb. 22, but no one has been found alive since.

Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker said New Zealanders' hearts went out to the families of those missing both locally and from overseas.

"It is a terrible day," he said. "It has been a tragic event and it has been something that none of us ever wanted or wished or even believed could happen in our city. So our thoughts, our hearts, our city, is with each and everyone of you."

Two Israeli backpackers were the first foreigners named among the dead, as the painstaking work of confirming the identities of scores of others gained pace.

The process of identifying the victims has been slowed by the extensive injuries to people who were crushed, and by the task of picking through the vast amount of rubble left behind by the magnitude 6.3 temblor.

Police Superintendent Sam Hoyle said Thursday that one more body had been found overnight, taking the overall count to 161, though just 13 have been publicly identified. Many other people remain missing, and officials have said the final death toll could be more than 200.

Hoyle said 90 of the bodies found so far were pulled from the Canterbury Television building, which housed a regional broadcaster and other offices including the language school, which taught students from Japan, China, the Philippines and other nations.

He said police and those responsible for identifying bodies had met victims families to explain why the process of was proceeding so slowly.

Superintendent Russell Gibson, another police commander involved in the recovery operation, said Thursday work had finally started at the collapsed bell tower of the Christchurch cathedral, which had to be braced before crews could enter. Up to 22 bodies may be buried in the rubble.

Other parts of the city were slowly returning to normal, though many of the 350,000 residents still have cut or limited water and power supplies and are using thousands of portable toilets deployed on street corners because of damage to the sewage system.


View the original article here

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Foreign rescue teams join search for NZ quake survivors (Reuters)

CHRISTCHURCH (Reuters) – Hundreds of foreign rescuers will join exhausted New Zealand teams on Thursday in an increasingly desperate search of quake-shattered buildings in central Christchurch as time runs out to find survivors buried under rubble.

Officials have abandoned hope of finding anyone alive in the collapsed Canterbury Television (CTV) building in the city center, including foreign students at a third-floor language school, with a grader moving in to clear debris.

Police warned about the possible collapse of a 26-story hotel unleashing a "domino" effect on surrounding building.

Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker said the quake-prone city now faced hard decisions on rebuilding its heart.

"We are not going to walk away from this place," Parker told New Zealand television. "We may have to level entire blocks in some places."

The Director of New Zealand's Ministry of Civil Defense and Emergency Management, John Hamilton, has said rescue teams have a window of only two or three days to find people after Tuesday's 6.3-magnitude earthquake.

Seventy-five people have been confirmed dead, but that toll was expected to rise with more than 300 people missing in the country's second-biggest city. Up to 100 of those were thought to be in the CTV building, police said.

Much of the city remained without power and water, and hundreds of people queued for water supplies brought in.

It was New Zealand's most deadly natural disaster for 80 years, and one estimate said the damage could cost $12 billion.

To avoid more deaths and curb crime, police and the military placed an overnight curfew on the central business district, with soldiers patrolling in armored personnel carriers as aftershocks rattled the unstable center.

Authorities also placed an exclusion zone around the hotel, which teetered near collapse, threatening nearby buildings.

"If the Hotel Grand Chancellor falls, and three engineers say it is a significant risk, that will be dramatic, a domino effect in the central city of other unstable buildings. It will be a major disaster," said police Superintendent Dave Cliff.

Rescue teams had to perform amputations to free some of the 120 survivors pulled from the wreckage of the tremor, which was the second strong quake to hit the historic tourist city in five months.

But there were moments of elation. A woman, Ann Bodkin, was rescued from a destroyed finance company building after a day trapped under a desk.

Cliff said as many as 100 bodies could be under the television building, while scores more could lie beneath the city's shattered cathedral and other nearby buildings.

A national state of emergency has been declared. It is the country's worst natural disaster since a 1931 quake in the North Island city of Napier which killed 256.

Christchurch Hospital received an influx of injured residents, with broken limbs, crush injuries and lacerations.

Thousands of people were facing a second night in emergency shelters in local schools, community halls and at a racecourse. Pope Benedict sent a message of support for survivors and rescuers from the Vatican.

"My thoughts turn especially to the people there who are being severely tested by this tragedy," he said. "I also ask you to join me in praying for all who have lost their lives."

Rescuers from the United States, Britain, Taiwan and Japan arrive in New Zealand on Thursday, with the first of 148 Australian specialists already on the streets.

ECONOMIC IMPACT

Indications of the big economic impact of the quake are starting to emerge. J.P. Morgan estimated insured losses could be $12 billion, according to a source who had seen a research note.

When asked about possible costs, Prime minister John Key told reporters: "No one's in a position to actually assess that." He said he hoped Christchurch could still host rugby World Cup matches later this year as planned.

Key said the country could afford to rebuild Christchurch, but reinsurance risk would probably worsen.

Catastrophe modeling firm AIR Worldwide Estimates said the insurance industry faces damage claims of between NZ$5 billion ($3.5 billion) and NZ$11.5 billion ($8 billion).

Reinsurers Munich Re, Swiss Re and Hannover Re, who help insurers cover big losses, took many weeks to provide damage estimates from the September quake due to complexities of assessing structural damage to buildings.

The disaster fueled talk that the central bank might cut interest rates in coming weeks to shore up confidence in the already-fragile national economy, but the bank did not mention monetary policy on Wednesday when it commented on the quake.

Seeing the quake as a further blow to the economy, Standard Chartered bank is revising down its 2011 GDP growth forecast for New Zealand to 1.4 percent and 2.7 percent for 2012 -- from 2.0 percent and 3.0 percent respectively, because of a double-dip in the housing market, tightening budget and sluggish local demand. ($1 = 1.339 New Zealand dollars)

(Writing by Rob Taylor; Editing by Ed Davies and Sugita Katyal)


View the original article here