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News, May 24, 2003, Al-Jazeerah.info |
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Manpower, Sniffer Dogs,
Know-How, Tools Pour Into Quake-Hit Algeria ALGIERS, 24 May 2003 — Aid in all forms poured in to Algeria from a
host of countries and international organizations yesterday to help the
North African country cope with a devastating earthquake which has
killed more than 1,400 people and left thousands injured. As rescue workers, sniffer dogs, medical equipment and staff, and
technical experts arrived from around the world, people in Algeria’s
densely populated northern coastal region gingerly began yesterday
returning to their homes. Many had spent the night outdoors, fearing
aftershocks following the quake that rocked their homes at evening
dinner time on Wednesday could bring down the buildings they live in, as
it had done to entire blocks of apartments in and around Algiers. In the town of Boumerdes, 50 km (30 miles) east of Algiers and the
hardest hit in the quake, more than 950 people were killed, many of them
crushed to death under tons of concrete when their apartment buildings
collapsed in the quake. France, the former colonial power in Algeria, was one of the first
countries to come to the aid of the North African country after the
quake, said by the French seismological service to have measured six
points on the Richter scale. One-hundred-twenty civil defense officers left France Thursday along
with sniffer dogs and specialist equipment to help emergency workers in
Algiers and nearby as they desperately worked to try to free the
hundreds of people feared still trapped under the rubble of collapsed
buildings. Algerian officials have warned that the toll — put yesterday at
1,467 dead and more than 7,000 injured — was likely to rise further. A team from the French-based Telecoms Sans Frontieres (Telecoms
without Borders — TSF) aid agency flew to Algeria with the French
rescuers, and will equip emergency teams in Algeria with satellite
telecommunications equipment. “Satellite is the only viable means of telecommunication,” a
spokesman for TSF said, explaining that undersea phone cables that link
Algeria to Europe had been sliced in several places by the quake. “TSF’s priority is firstly to help the emergency services... Our
equipment will allow a link to be established between rescue teams,”
the agency said. Turkey, where a quake measuring 6.4 on the Richter
scale killed some 180 people in the eastern province of Bingol earlier
this month, has sent rescue workers, and Italy, where 27 children and
their teacher died when their school collapsed in a quake last October,
has sent the first of three emergency teams to join the rescue effort. A
field hospital and medical staff were due to follow from Italy. A team of 75 rescue workers left Sweden yesterday morning along with
a dozen sniffer dogs and tons of relief material, the Swedish rescue
agency said. Russia has sent a team of more than 57 rescuers, including
24 doctors, and sniffer dogs, officials there said. Germany has already sent a first group of rescue workers, the German
Interior Ministry said, with more specialists, sniffer dogs and
equipment due to follow. A team from the United Nations’ Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) arrived in Algiers Thursday, an AFP
correspondent witnessed, and the European Commission has said it plans
to launch a joint aid operation. In a statement from the EU presidency issued in Athens, the European
Union said it was “ready to offer all possible assistance in order to
alleviate the suffering of the Algerian people.” The government of
Spain, where the tremor damaged or sunk boats around the Balearic
islands in the Mediterranean, on Thursday dispatched the first of three
planes with rescue and medical equipment to Algeria. US President George W. Bush has pledged to aid the victims, saying,
“The United States stands ready to help.” South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun pledged $100,0000 in relief funds
for Algeria, while Yonhap news agency reported 21 rescue workers had
been sent to the North African country. Algerian government radio on Thursday appealed for medical staff and
blood donors, and police reinforcements were deployed across the country
to prevent looting.
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