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8 October, When a nation came together - 10 Years after Earthquake

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Ten years have elapsed since the Kashmir earthquake of 2005. The temblor jolted this country into the realisation that nature’s wrath knows no boundaries.

The death toll almost touched 75,000 according to the official count and more than 86,000 according to unofficial figures.

It was one of those moments when most Pakistanis would remember what they were doing when they first heard of, or experienced, the quake. Over the next few days, the news filtered in slowly of the sheer scale of the devastation.

Many of us remember the dramatic appeal from the United Nations for a relief effort on the magnitude of the Berlin airlift, the riots around aid distribution points in the most affected areas and the traffic jams on the roads as citizens from across the country mobilised to rush food and other supplies to the quake-hit spots.

It would be well worth it to remember a few other things too. First and foremost is the warning from the world’s leading geologists who study this region that this earthquake “may not have released more than one-tenth of the cumulative elastic energy that has developed since the previous great earthquake in the region in 1555”.

There are more to come — either tomorrow or 50 years from now. With a clear warning that more such events will occur in the decades to come, the biggest lesson from the 2005 destruction is that preparedness is key. Fortunately for us, preparing for earthquakes is not as difficult or complicated as it is for other types of natural disasters such as floods.

At the top of the list are building codes to ensure that dwellings and other structures can withstand the shock of a temblor. In the two cities at either end of the epicentre of the 2005 earthquake, hardly any concrete structures survived; many of those that did were rendered unusable.

Ten years after the catastrophic event, there is a patchy track record of implementing earthquake-resistant building codes. The Development Authority of Muzaffarabad, for example, has certainly promulgated new codes and state buildings have adhered to them, but many private dwellings continue to violate these. The same is true in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Also read: Lessons from Nepal for Kashmir

The state played a largely laudable role in the rehabilitation of the affected areas, even though important gaps between the promises made at the time and what was eventually delivered persist to this day.

Out of a total of Rs207bn that were pledged for reconstruction, about Rs140bn were eventually disbursed. The job was gargantuan, but, by and large, the government of the time rose to the occasion. Whatever the general opinion of his rule may be, Gen Musharraf provided a sturdy guiding hand when the staggering scale of the crisis fuelled a sense of panic in the country.

However, less than five years later, the floods of 2010 would prove that no lasting lessons were learned in how to manage natural disasters.

The earthquake reminded us of our insignificance compared to the forces of nature that envelop our lives so completely. But the aftermath, which brought countless tears to countless eyes, brought out the best in each of us as people scrambled to contribute in any way they could.

Doctors trekked across dangerous mud slopes to reach affected communities while journalists dropped their pens and joined in the search for survivors under the rubble. Edhi volunteers cut a trail of sheer bravery as they crossed impassable terrain with large convoys of relief goods, being the first to arrive in many locations.

At relief collection points in the cities, people reported that even beggars were coming forward to share their meagre takings — even if much of the effort may have been hasty and ramshackle, and there were stories of how some made money off the misery of others.

The help that Pakistan received from the world community was also significant. But 10 years on, let’s not forget how the people of Pakistan pulled together to face a terrible calamity, registering for generations to come that the bonds of common empathy that bind them to each other are alive and well — and stronger than any force of nature, and certainly stronger than any politics or any ideology that seeks to tear the people apart.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1211566/when-a-nation-came-together
 
Can't believe it's been 10 years i still remember it like yesterday and i think that was the last time our whole nation came together. Everyone wanted to contribute from a beggar to a businessman. From a kid to a old man.

We were doing fundraising on streets and roads and in markets and schools/colleges almost everywhere and nobody disappointed us i never saw that unity and contribution from the whole nation again.
 
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I remember it like it was yesterday. It was the third day of Ramzan, and it struck at 8:52 AM. I remember the ceiling fan and the chandeliers swing like pendulums. Outside, we could see the houses sway, and the ground under our feet was undulating like the waves of the sea. I've never experienced anything quite like it.

Some of the aftershocks, that went on for days afterwards, were severe in their own right. I remember that first night, there was a severe hailstorm too.

Months later I remember driving past that building that collapsed in Islamabad, and noticing a little girl's doll amongst the rubble. And how one person trapped inside for days bore my exact name, so I started receiving panicked phone calls from friends I had lost touch with who had heard my name on the news.
 
I remember it like it was yesterday. It was the third day of Ramzan, and it struck at 8:52 AM. I remember the ceiling fan and the chandeliers swing like pendulums. Outside, we could see the houses sway, and the ground under our feet was undulating like the waves of the sea. I've never experienced anything quite like it.

Some of the aftershocks, that went on for days afterwards, were severe in their own right. I remember that first night, there was a severe hailstorm too.

Months later I remember driving past that building that collapsed in Islamabad, and noticing a little girl's doll amongst the rubble. And how one person trapped inside for days bore my exact name, so I started receiving panicked phone calls from friends I had lost touch with who had heard my name on the news.

Those aftershocks continued for weeks. During days it was easy to handle but during nights we had sometime whole sleepless nights because of those aftershocks that used to happen after every few minutes.
 
Those aftershocks continued for weeks. During days it was easy to handle but during nights we had sometime whole sleepless nights because of those aftershocks that used to happen after every few minutes.

It so happened that my wife was eight months pregnant with our first child. When the actual earthquake struck, my first instinct was to run out of the house. I was half way out when I heard her cry out and I realized that she couldn't get off the bed, where she had been resting, on to her feet. After I had helped her up, the walk to the front door was the longest, because there was the very real fear that the roof would collapse on top of us.

During the aftershocks I remembered I had to help her, and each time we had to reprise that slow walk out.
 
It so happened that my wife was eight months pregnant with our first child. When the actual earthquake struck, my first instinct was to run out of the house. I was half way out when I heard her cry out and I realized that she couldn't get off the bed, where she had been resting, on to her feet. After I had helped her up, the walk to the front door was the longest, because there was the very real fear that the roof would collapse on top of us.

During the aftershocks I remembered I had to help her, and each time we had to reprise that slow walk out.

Yea so many stories and memories attached with this earthquake. We moved from first floor to ground floor and whole family used to sleep there because of those aftershocks that continued for weeks.
 
I remember that day. I was preparing for my class 8th Urdu examination.
 
I remember that day. I was preparing for my class 8th Urdu examination.

Urdu Exam ???

It was my 1st day off after joining a law firm as I had to go to banks and some other stuff.

I was sleeping in my bed and all of a sudden my bed started to move, I woke up and ceiling fan in room was also moving like hell i hurriedly move away and the fan fell exactly at the place where my head was if I hadn't move. I ran out & my whole mohallah was standing outside.

Yah it was so shocking but the main thing was new body knew, how destructive earthquake it was untill 2 pm when media stopped focusing on Marghalla towers in Islamabad and news from other areas started to spread.
 
Urdu Exam ???

Urdu subject ka exam. One mandatory language other than English. In those days 8th class examination was also a board examination conducted by DIET. Our first paper was that of Urdu. I was sitting in my room when suddenly the windows started to shake. I ran away into a nearby paddy field. I remember a dog was running as if he had rabies. Our examination got postponed by more than 2 weeks. There was no electricity for some days because of fallen electricity poles. It was all chaos.
 
It was a day off for me, and for some reason I was watching MTV so early in the morning. :facepalm:
First thought that came to my mind when I felt the tremors was that I dont want to die watching freaking MTV.
 
England cricketers doing relief work during 2005 earthquake.

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Earthquakes are terrifying having experienced a couple in Karachi, you never know what it really feels like until you experience it
 
The fence wall of my examination centre had also fallen.

I remember after the quake, all the old cracks in buildings which had nothing do with quake were used by people to get compensation.
 
I was in my early teens yet I still remember like it happened yesterday..

The nation has never been so shocked and united since then, maybe after the APS..
 
Nation observes 19th anniversary of Oct 8, 2005 earthquake

The 19th anniversary of the killer earthquake of October 8, 2005 is being observed today (Tuesday) across Pakistan and Azad Jammu and Kashmir with due feelings of seriousness, respect and determination.

The anniversary will be observed as the national day of awareness about safety from the natural disasters.

The day will dawn with special prayers in the mosques at Fajr prayers across AJK for the departed souls of victims. It is be a gazetted holiday throughout AJK State.

The major ceremony to mark the day will be held at the capital city of Muzaffarabad, with the sign of deep-rooted love and affection by the government and the people of Pakistan as well as the national and international NGOs and brotherly foreign countries who contributed their exceptional share for the rebuilding and rehabilitation of the quake-hit zone of AJK.

Besides, special functions would be arranged to raise awareness among the people about adoption of per-cautionary measures to avert the losses in case of any natural catastrophe, the sources added.

The special ceremonies include awareness walks, seminars and symposiums across the Valley which will be attended by the people representing all walks of life including social and political workers, lawyers, journalists and members of the business fraternity.

A tremor of 7.6 magnitudes shook parts of the country at 08:52 am on October 08, 2005. The massive destructions broke all the previous record of the havocs wreaked by the natural disasters in the region. Pakistan has still been suffering of the loss of the demolition of the infrastructure and transportation occurred due to the catastrophic tremor jolted Azad Kashmir, Muzaffarabad, Islamabad, Balakot and other northern parts of Pakistan.

Besides death of over 80,000 people, more than 100,000 people were injured in the quake, which also destroyed villages, roads, schools, hospitals, and bridges and caused massive land sliding in the most affected areas and left hundreds of thousands displaced.

DUNYA NEWS
 
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