Earthquake
kills at least 10, injures hundreds in India and Bangladesh
NEW DELHI — A 6.7-magnitude earthquake left at least seven
people dead, scores injured, and houses and buildings flattened in the
northeastern Indian state of Manipur early Monday.
The quake occurred about 18 miles west of Imphal, the
state capital, around 4:35 a.m., according to the U.S. Geological
Survey. Strong tremors were felt in China’s Tibet
region, Bhutan, Bangladesh and Burma. Three people were reported dead in
Bangladesh.
Manipur’s chief minister, Okram Ibobi Singh, told reporters on
Monday that the state was assessing the damage. Two teams from India’s National
Disaster Response Force have been deployed to the area, he said. Another
tremor, magnitude 3.6, was felt about five hours later.
The deputy commissioner of the Imphal West area, Ningthoujam
Geoffrey, said three people died in his jurisdiction and 45 suffered injuries.
Sixty houses and other buildings were damaged, Geoffrey said.
Imphal resident R.K. Wangsana, 25, said he was awakened Monday
by the sounds of his mother’s screams and a wall crumbling over him. After the
shaking stopped, he said, he clawed his way out of the wreckage.
“I saw a little hole near me and I started pushing. It made some
space in the rubble, and slowly I crawled out,” he said.
He then rescued his injured mother and sister.
“Now we are out under the sky,” Wangsana said. “I don’t have any
place to go. My home is gone, and I am clueless what I am going to do next.”
A major bridge and the newly built Central Agricultural
University were damaged, and bricks tumbled from the building that houses a
historic women’s market, Ima Keithel.
Leika Yumnam, who works with a local social service
organization, said she was jolted from her sleep by the tremors. Frightened,
she ran to check on her parents as furniture tumbled. Fortunately, they had
already left the home to attend their morning yoga class, she said.
One Imphal resident, Ram Wangkheirakpam, said he thought “death
and destruction was imminent” when the quake struck.
The tremor was the deadliest in India since the Nepal
earthquakes in Apriland May, which killed more than
8,000 people, including more than 100 in India’s border states of Uttar Pradesh
and Bihar. The collision of two of Earth’s tectonic plates — the Indian plate and the much larger Eurasian
plate — has made the Himalayan region one of the most threatened places in the
world for seismic activity.
Gowen, Annie. "Earthquake kills
at least 10, injuries hundreds in India and Bangladesh." 4 Jan. 2016. The
Washington Post. 4 Jan.
2016. <https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/earthquake-in-india-kills-at-least-8-injures-hundreds-and-flattens-buildings/2016/01/04/1e73d7eb-5fa0-4694-8d3c-f5c2e9911cd9_story.html
>
RESPONSE:
The article presents information from the current earthquake that took place in
the Asian continent. The earthquake was rated 6.7 and killed at least 10 and
more than 100 people injured as reported in the article above. It seems that
the earthquake was totally unexpected like most natural disasters are. The
author presents information without any bias in any particular side. The
question for places that have been affected by the earthquake (Tibet, Bhutan,
Burma, Bangladesh, and New Delhi) is what actions they are going to take next
for the hundreds of people that have lost their houses and work places. The
most reasonable response for the government would be to provide them with
shelters and a way of getting their properties back if the government is
capable of doing so.
I think that your response gave a clear understanding of the article above. I liked how you gave a possible response option for the government to take. There were many countries affected by this earthquake and the previous earthquake in Nepal so I can very clearly see the international issue presented here. Overall, I think that your article choice and response were really good!
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