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Quake media
Quake media





quake media

RELATED: Why a major Alaska earthquake triggered warnings but no major damage “This is the largest earthquake to happen in the Alaska region since 1965,” said Michael West, state seismologist with the Alaska Earthquake Center. The magnitude-8.2 quake hit roughly 60 miles offshore of the tiny community of Perryville, reported the U.S.

quake media

Wednesday, triggering tsunami warnings for much of the Gulf of Alaska coastline, but no large waves. This initial funding requirement will be reviewed and adjusted in the coming weeks as the impact on children and families becomes clearer.Screenshot from Alaska Earthquake Center mapĪ major earthquake struck near the Alaska Peninsula at 10:15 p.m. UNICEF estimates that it will need US$15 million to respond to the most urgent needs of at least 385,000 people including 167,000 children under the age of five for a period of eight weeks. UNICEF is rushing life-saving supplies including medicine, safe water, hygiene and sanitation material, and tarpaulins, to the affected areas, even as flooding and mudslides hamper relief efforts. Putting children back in classrooms is perhaps the best way to make sure they – and their families and communities – can recover.” And we will need resources to rebuild some schools, rehabilitate others, equip classes with desks, teachers and students with pedagogical and school kits. Parents and teachers who have lost everything will need support. “Haiti’s children need solidarity and support. "The latest calamity comes on top of two years that saw children out of school for months at a time due to political or security challenges and the COVID-19 pandemic," Maes said. Over 115,000 houses had been damaged or destroyed, and nearly 580,000 people, or about 40 per cent of the population in the three departments, were in need of emergency assistance. As of late Tuesday, at least 1,941 people had been killed and over 9,900 injured. The official tally of deaths and destruction is still growing.

quake media

“But it is so crucial for children who have just gone through this traumatic earthquake-plus-extreme weather experience, to have the normalcy and stability of being in a classroom with their friends and teachers.” “It will be extremely difficult for parents, teachers and the government to get children safely back to school just three weeks from now, when schools re-open on September 7,” said Bruno Maes, UNICEF’s Representative in Haiti, after visiting a damaged school in Mazenod, near Les Cayes. Assessments have yet to take place in Nippes and Grand’Anse departments, as well as other communities that have yet to be reached. Initial estimates show that 94 of the 255 schools in South Department are completely destroyed or have sustained partial damages. PORT-AU-PRINCE / PANAMA / NEW YORK, 18 August 2021 – Preliminary assessments conducted Tuesday by UNICEF and Haitian officials in one of the three departments hardest hit by Saturday’s earthquake, followed by Tropical Depression Grace on Monday, revealed extensive destruction to schools, just weeks before they are due to re-open.







Quake media