Haiti islandcrumbles under shock earthquake

An earthquake specialist from Coleraine says that underdeveloped countries such as Haiti are ill equipped to deal with natural disasters.

The quake, which virtually destroyed parts of the island, including the capital, Port-au-Prince, measured 7.0 in magnitude with aftershocks of 5.9 and 5.5.

The island lies on a boundary between the Caribbean and North American plates and is prone to seismic activity. In recent years it has had to deal with hurricanes.

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Sandy Steacy, Professor of Earthquake Physics at University of Ulster, Coleraine, said: “It’s really an issue of resources. In a desperately poor country like Haiti, contingency plans just prove too expensive.

“Unfortunately Haiti’s scarce resources were focused on hurricanes, leaving them totally unprepared for the events which unfolded this week.”

Professor Steacy said the force of an earthquake did not always equate to the scale of the damage it caused.

Comparing Haiti with the the effect of a 6.7 magnitude earthquake in south California in 1994, she added: “A few apartment buildings were damaged and a stretch of the freeway but, by and large, there was little damage.

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“The quality of construction in Haiti is where the real problem lies. The buildings are not reinforced and so when a quake hits they crumble.

“At the moment, the situation is still primarily one of rescue and aid.

“However, eventually a massive rebuild will begin and the danger is that if the same type of buildings are constructed once again then future earthquakes are likely to cause similar devastation.”