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Pisco, Peru (AFP) Aug 20, 2007 A 4.7 magnitude aftershock rattled people queuing up to leave this town by air and by bus Monday, as rescuers gave way to bulldozers removing mountains of rubble from last week's devastating earthquake. President Alan Garcia announced the start of fumigation operations across the town to head off diseases before they turn into possible epidemics. More than 1,000 police and soldiers have also been deployed to halt the looting that has sown fear among the battered population. According to the latest count by the Civil Defense service, 540 people died across the whole quake-hit region of southern Peru, 1,039 were injured, and more than 176,000 people were left homeless. A total of 35,000 homes were destroyed in the magnitude 8.0 temblor (7.7 on the Richter scale) that rumbled across southern Peru on Wednesday, most of them in Pisco, which was 70 percent destroyed. Many survivors, weak and shivering fro nights spent out in the open, were queuing up for hours at the local air force base for flights taking them away from Pisco. Other lines formed at town bus stops, where people paid up to 40 dollars for a ride to Lima or any other city unharmed by the quake. Five days after the catastrophe, rescue operations were wound up to the frustration of some rescue workers who believed there could still be more survivors. Firefighter Javier Vallero, who has the unenviable record of having found the most corpses beneath the rubble, talked emotionally of walking "hand in hand with death." "You feel so powerless when you don't get there in time. I have found lots of bodies, I don't know how many because I find it too hard to count them. "I've found people cut in two by a wall which has fallen on them," said the 25-year-old Peruvian. The town's San Clemente church has been the focus for the grieving. The roof had collapsed in the quake, killing 160 people -- nearly half of the town's 335 identified dead. Monday, only the bell towers and part of the broken dome were still standing as heavy machinery knocked down the facade, deemed in danger of falling. The risk of collapse of the few buildings left standing in Pisco was real and widespread. "Just about all of them are dangerous," a chief firefighter, Jose Varallanos, said. The mostly poor families whose rudimentary adobe homes had come crashing down would be relocated to temporary lodgings being prepared while the clearing effort already underway intensified. Still, families camping out in the open near their broken homes were reluctant to leave. "This is my home, we want to rebuild it," Gisela Cajo Torrelba, 34, standing by a pile of dust and stones that used to house her and her three children. Elsewhere in Pisco, fumigators pumped insecticidal smoke into the rubble, under which an estimated 150 bodies were lying in advanced states of decomposition. Police and soldiers were also keeping a high profile, directing non-rescue personnel away from the center of the town, which was being used as a tent base for officials and firemen. There were no further reports of pillaging or violence, however, according to police Colonel Roger Torres, who said regular patrols were instilling "a feeling of confidence" in the skittish population. He added, though, that the lack of water and electricity meant desperation was still at a high level. Humanitarian aid was flowing in from across the country, and from abroad, though still not sufficient for all those left homeless. Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, South Korea, the United States, France and Spain were among the states sending aid including medicine, water and food. The Vatican said it would send 148,000 euros (200,000 dollars). The World Bank on Monday announced it was donating 400,000 dollars to assist Peru in responding to the earthquake. Bolivian President Evo Morales and his vice president pledged half their salaries to the earthquake victims, while cabinet ministers gave one quarter of their wages. Bolivia last week sent Peru 12 tons of food and medical supplies. Aftershocks kept people on edge. Peru's geophysical institute has reported more than 480 tremors following the quake, which was the most devastating to hit the country since 1970. Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters When the Earth Quakes A world of storm and tempest
![]() ![]() The Gutierrez family cooks big pots of red beans over a wood fire on the street and sleeps outdoors behind the ruins of their home in this Peruvian town ravaged by a massive earthquake. |
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