Quake, tsunamis kill more than 700 in Chile
Mon, March 1 2010 04:14 | 1248 Views
Concepcion, Chile (ANTARA News/Reuters) - The death toll from aa
massive earthquake that struck Chile surged above 700 on Sunday as
reports emerged of coastal towns devastated by the tremor and tsunamis
that followed.
President Michelle Bachelet said that 708 people were confirmed dead and that the total was likely to rise.
The death toll from Saturday`s 8.8-magnitude quake had stood at
400 earlier on Sunday, before state television quoted emergency
officials as saying that 350 people were killed in the coastal town of
Constitucion, which was hit by a tsunami.
Television images from the fishing port about 350 km (220 miles)
southwest of the capital Santiago showed houses destroyed by the
offshore quake and a tsunami, which washed large fishing boats onto
land and flipped over cars.
There were similar scenes of devastation in Pelluhue, another
coastal town, where cars were tossed on top of shattered houses.
People desperate for food and water ransacked stores in some
quake-stricken areas, raising speculation that the government would use
martial law to crack down on looters.
Hundreds of thousands of homes and some highways across central
Chile were seriously damaged by the quake, dealing a heavy blow to
infrastructure in the world`s No. 1 copper producer and one of Latin
America`s most stable economies.
A lack of water, food and fuel sharpened the hardship for the
hundreds of thousands of people left homeless, and widespread
disruption to the power supply threatened to hamper Chilean industry`s
recovery.
In the hard-hit city of Concepcion, about 500 km (310 miles) south
of Santiago, about 60 people were feared to have been crushed to death
in a collapsed apartment block where rescuers worked through the night
to find survivors.
"We spent the whole night working, smashing through walls to find
survivors. The biggest problem is fuel, we need fuel for our machinery
and water for our people," Commander Marcelo Plaza said.
Police used tear gas and water cannons to disperse a crowd of
looters carrying off food and electrical appliances from a supermarket
in Concepcion. Television images showed people stuffing groceries and
other goods into shopping trolleys.
"People have gone days without eating," said Orlando Salazar, one
of the looters at the supermarket. "The only option is to come here and
get stuff for ourselves."
Concepcion`s mayor, Jacqueline van Rysselberghe, said the
situation was getting "out of control" due to shortages of basic
supplies and called for the national government to help.
"We need the army. We can`t have people defending their own
possession because it will be the law of the strongest," she said.(*)Editor: B Kunto Wibisono
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