| The head of the United Nations office for disaster risk reduction has
welcomed the mass earthquake drill organized by Indian authorities in
Delhi yesterday and encouraged all high seismic cities to follow the
city’s example to better prepare for possible catastrophes.
More than 40,000 people took part in the drill to check the alertness
and preparedness of the 16.7 million people living in the Indian capital
in the event of 7.2-magnitude quake, according to a news release issued by the UN International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR).
Margareta Wahlström, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for
Disaster Risk Reduction, welcomed the drill, which was the culmination
of the country’s first-ever State-wide earthquake preparedness exercise
which got underway last December.
“I encourage all high risk seismic cities to follow the example of Delhi
and to be better prepared against any catastrophic event,” she stated.
“Mock drills are a good opportunity to identify gaps in preparedness
planning. More than 370 million people live in earthquake-prone cities
around the world and there are mass casualties on a regular basis from
earthquakes.”
UNISDR noted that experts have long questioned Delhi’s ability to
withstand a major earthquake due to lack of safety standards, illegal
buildings and poor enforcement of building codes. The city is classified
as a high-risk seismic zone, ranking four on a five-point scale by the
United States Geological Survey.
The Delhi government estimates that nine out of every 10 buildings in
the city are at risk of moderate or significant quake damage. Every
year, tens of thousands of housing units are built without any
earthquake safety checks, stated UNISDR.
Yesterday’s two-hour disaster simulation, organized by the National
Disaster Management Authority and the Delhi Disaster Management
Authority, was conducted across hundreds of schools, hospitals, cinemas,
resident welfare associations, government office buildings, markets,
and petrol pumps.
A total of 276 “deaths” were enacted, while around 828 people were
assumed to have suffered major injuries, and 1,897 others suffered minor
injuries.
The exercise brought together the police, fire officials, ambulances and
volunteers. Six metro stations were closed for over 30 minutes and road
traffic in many areas of the city was diverted as |