February 12, 2001 Issue


India Today, February 12

DEATHQUAKE
 


True Horror:
Hell On Earth

Rescue and Relief:
Picking up the Pieces

Gujarat Government:
Is Keshubhai
Up To It

First Person Account:
Dateline Fearscape

Quake-Resistant Building: Preventing Collapse

Insurance:
Leave It To God

Economic Impact:
What Goes Down...

Looking Back:
Latur: Still Shaken

Good Samaritans:
State-of-The-Heart

Care Today:
Rebuilding Gujarat: Hope For Survivors

 
 
OTHER STORIES
  Caplooks
 
  Voices  
  Offtrack: On The Ball  
  Eyecatchers  
       
 



 
  Home  
 

DEATHQUAKE; THE PAIN AND HORROR

Hell On Earth

The death count could go up to 1 lakh with more than double the number injured or homeless. In Kutch many towns are destroyed and some villages wiped off the map.

By Sudeep Chakravarti

The ruins are quiet. All life has ebbed away.

If anybody is alive now in the desolation alleys of Gujarat, buried beneath concrete, mud and human folly, it will be an event to make even the harshest agnostic consider the existence of God. It may help to understand better an equation made in hell, to soften a blow that will be felt for a generation: if destiny is kind, 40,000 dead. If it is not, more than twice that number, and even more bruised, maimed, orphaned, and destitute, a horrifying honour roll in the world's count of the damned.

They, and others who have been unharmed but not untouched-can there be anyone?-by one of India's worst earthquakes, will carry images with them till the day they die. Of three minutes
of liquid earth, crashing buildings and dreams, shattered families, cheating builders, callous officials, and paralysed government. Of stories of schoolchildren dead in their hundreds, crushed into rubble while celebrating India on the morning of January 26. Of there being few to watch rescuers clear debris in the hope of finding somebody alive in a small town in Kutch because none are presumed alive anymore. Elsewhere, of sole survivors of families wishing they were dead, too. Of millionaires turned into paupers and paupers into the wretched. Of how government lost the will to act even as 20 countries from around the world-even Pakistan-stood ready to ship rescuers and aid.

Fortunately, they will also carry images of hope. Of the infant being pulled out from the ruins of a high-rise after 100 hours. Of a child soothed by her mother's kiss, as she nursed an amputated hand. Of stories that spoke of immense bravery and selflessness, as people cremated their own dead and went back to rescuing others. Of beggars and businessmen who donated time, money and a common bond of civil society and sorrow to do what they could. Of the Indian diplomat who urged planes laden with rescue teams and relief material to take off, convinced he would have the permit arranged in time for them to land in Ahmedabad-and he did.

Gujarat is trying to live again because people who built it with enterprise won't let it die of despair.

Top

 
 

 

 
 
Care Today
 
 

 PHOTO GALLERY

 
  Deathquake  
   

The Pain And Horror
The cataclysmic quake on India's
52nd Republic Day served to highlight
the gaping holes in the nation's
disaster management ability. Caught in celebrations, it was five and a half hours before Delhi officials even met. See The Latest Pictures

 

 
    Web Exclusives
COLUMNS  
 


Downsizing is not about getting rid of lower division clerks but shrinking the cabinet and thus the government, says
V Shankar Aiyar

in
Au ContrAiyar

 

 
INTERVIEW  

This is just the beginning, V.K. Aatre, who is at the core of the LCA action, tells India Today Principal Correspondent Stephen David in an exclusive
Interview.

 

 
DESPATCHES  

A delay in the implementation of an eco-development project in Ranthambhore forces the World Bank to drastically cut aid. But the Rajasthan Government is yet to learn from its mistakes, writes India Today's Principal Correspondent Rohit Parihar in
Despatches.

 

 

PREVIOUS ISSUE


India Today, February 5

Click here to view
the previous issue

 

 

 

CONTACT US SUBSCRIPTION PRIVACY POLICY