it sits on a destructive plate
margin where the Indian plate is
being forced under the Eurasian
plate.
it is an LEDC
the earthquake
occured on the 8th
October 2005.
it happened
at 8:50 local
time and
measured 7.6
on the Richter
scale.
the focus of the earthquake was only
16 miles deep and the epicentre was
close to Muzaffarabad.
the earthquake caused a 75km long crack
to form in the earth's surface.
it caused damage
to an area of
30,000 km2 and
was felt as far
away as Kabul in
Afghanistan and
Delhi in India.
by the
27th
October
2005, there
had been
over 978
aftershocks
measuring
at least 4
on the
Richter
scale.
social impacts.
there were around
80,000 deaths, mostly
because of collapsed
buildings.
13th highest
death toll on
record.
hundreds of thousands of people were
injured, including 6,000 in India.
3 million made homeless.
water pipelines
and electricity
lines were
broken, cutting
off supplies.
landslides buried
buildings and
people. they also
blocked access to
roads and cut off
water supplies,
electricity supplies
and telephone
lines.
diarrhoea and
other diseases
spread due to a
lack of clean water.
freezing winter conditions shortly
after the earthquake caused more
casualties and meant rescue and
rebuilding operations were
difficult.
only 199
hospitals
still
functioning.
economic impacts
it's been
estimated
that the
earthquake
cost
around
US$5
billion in
total.
whole villages and thousands of buildigns
were destroyed. for example, 80% of Uri was
destroyed.
in some areas
up to 25km from
the epicentre,
nearly 25%
building collapse
and 50% of
buildings
suffered severe
damage.
the total cost
of rebuilding
has been
estimated at
US$3.5 billion.
environmental impacts
landslides and rockfalls occurred throughout
the region.
more were relatively
small but there were two
major landslides that
each affected an area of
more than 0.1km2 - one
in Muzaffrabad and one
in the Jhelum valley.
the Jhelum Valley landslide was
gthe biggest at over 1 km wide,
the debris reached over 2 km
from the top of the slide. the
debris created a dam at the
bottom of the valley, this
blocked two rivers at their
confluence.
as a result of the earthquake and surface
rupture, the ground shifted by more than 5 m in
some areas of Kashmir.
the response was delayed in many areas.
help didn't reach many areas for days or weeks. People had to be
rescued by hand without any equipment or help from emergency
services.
tents blankets and medical
supplies were distributed within a
month but not to all affected areas.
the Pakistani government set up the Federal Relief Commission (FRC)
and the Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority
(ERRA) to coordinate activities with other international agencies and
NGOs.
international aid
and equipment
such as helicopters
were brought in, as
well as teams of
people from other
countries.
around 40,000 people
have been relocated to a
new town, from the
destroyed town of
Balakot.
the
government
gave money to
people whose
homes had
been
destroyed so
they can
rebuild them.
new health
centres have
been set up in
the area.
training has
been provided
to help rebuild
more buildings
as earthquake
resistant.
there was no hazard management.
there was no local
disaster planning in
place.
buildings were not designed to be
earthquake proof. many houses were
structurally poor because people
couldn't afford better buildings.
however, even government buildings in areas
such as Muzaffarabad were structurally unsound
and so were damaged in the earthquake.
communications were poor, there were few roads and they were badly
constructed.
aid and responses.
$62 billion
pledged by the
government.
locals tried
to help those
trapped by
buildings.
military hospitals opened for civilians.
the government did not request international assistance.