Posted by: Emlyn Morgan
« on: June 24, 2024, 08:24:41 am »Nine months later much of the High Atlas is still a disaster zone with thousands still living in improvised emergency shelters. In many villages reconstruction has not started.
I believe money is not the problem. Expressed in USD, Morocco has allocated 12 billion dollars to the 5-yr plan, included 14000 dollars for each collapsed house and 8000 for partial collapses. Of course these are just figures in a ledger which take much time and planning to become tangible results.
So, apart from inevitable bureaucracy what is the problem? As I see it: the scale of the devastation: the remote mountainous nature of the terrain: hundreds of villages on steep mountainsides: some villages flattened or nearly totally destroyed: the climate, freezing in winter, deep snows, baking in summer, and sometimes torrential rain: broken roads, some blocked by fifty-ton boulders (which apparently shot there from mountainsides at (I read) 50 mph, some of them through villages causing destruction in their path: water channels and pipes broken.
Regarding the scale of devastation: 60,000 houses destroyed, 500 schools damaged, 2000 mosques.
And, we don't forget, 3000 souls killed and 4600 injured.
Note: My information is from journals and Internet reports. I have not personally visited the High Atlas since the earthquake.
The bottom photo taken before the earthquake shows one of the hundreds of villages affected. The other two photos are of the same village a month ago, with temporary emergency accommodation.
I believe money is not the problem. Expressed in USD, Morocco has allocated 12 billion dollars to the 5-yr plan, included 14000 dollars for each collapsed house and 8000 for partial collapses. Of course these are just figures in a ledger which take much time and planning to become tangible results.
So, apart from inevitable bureaucracy what is the problem? As I see it: the scale of the devastation: the remote mountainous nature of the terrain: hundreds of villages on steep mountainsides: some villages flattened or nearly totally destroyed: the climate, freezing in winter, deep snows, baking in summer, and sometimes torrential rain: broken roads, some blocked by fifty-ton boulders (which apparently shot there from mountainsides at (I read) 50 mph, some of them through villages causing destruction in their path: water channels and pipes broken.
Regarding the scale of devastation: 60,000 houses destroyed, 500 schools damaged, 2000 mosques.
And, we don't forget, 3000 souls killed and 4600 injured.
Note: My information is from journals and Internet reports. I have not personally visited the High Atlas since the earthquake.
The bottom photo taken before the earthquake shows one of the hundreds of villages affected. The other two photos are of the same village a month ago, with temporary emergency accommodation.