By Sam Metz, MARRAKECH
Morocco
An earthquake has sown destruction and devastation in Morocco, where death and injury counts continue to rise as rescue crews dig out people both alive and dead in villages that were reduced to rubble.
Law enforcement and aid
workers — both Moroccan and international — have arrived in the region south of
Marrakech that was hardest hit by the magnitude-6.8 tremor Friday night and
several aftershocks. Residents await food, water and electricity, and giant
boulders now block steep mountain roads.
Here’s what you need to know:
The
epicenter was high in the Atlas Mountains about 70 kilometers (44 miles) south
of Marrakech in Al Haouz province.
The region is largely rural,
made up of red-rock mountains, picturesque gorges and glistening streams and
lakes.
For residents like Hamid
Idsalah, a 72-year-old mountain guide from the Ouargane Valley, it is unclear
what the future holds.
Idsalah relies on Moroccan and
foreign tourists who visit the region due to its proximity to both Marrakech
and Toubkal, North Africa’s tallest peak and a destination for hikers and
climbers.
“I can’t reconstruct my home.
I don’t know what I’ll do. Still, I’m alive so I’ll wait,” he said as rescue
teams traversed the unpaved road through the valley for the first time this
weekend.
The earthquake shook most of
Morocco and caused injury and death in other provinces, including Marrakech,
Taroudant and Chichaoua.
Of the 2,122 deaths reported
as of Sunday evening, 1,351 were in Al Haouz, a region with a population
greater than 570,00, according to Morocco’s 2014 census.
In the largely rural region,
where people speak a combination of Arabic and Tachelhit, Morroco’s most common
Indigenous language, villages of clay and mud brick built into mountainsides
have been destroyed.
Though tourism contributes to
the economy, the province is largely agrarian. And like much of North Africa,
before the earthquake Al Haouz was reckoning with record drought that dried
rivers and lakes, imperiling the largely agricultural economy and way of life.
Outside a destroyed mosque in
the town of Amizmiz, Abdelkadir Smana said the disaster would compound existing
struggles in the area, which had reckoned with the coronavirus in addition to
the drought.
“Before and now, it’s the
same,” said the 85-year-old. “There wasn’t work or much at all.”
Morocco has deployed
ambulances, rescue crews and soldiers to the region to help assist with
emergency response efforts.
Aid groups said the government
has not made a broad appeal for help and accepted only limited foreign
assistance.
The Interior Ministry said it
was accepting search and rescue-focused international aid from Spain, Qatar,
Britain and the United Arab Emirates, bypassing offers from French President
Emmanuel Macron and U.S. President Joe Biden.
“We stand ready to provide any
necessary assistance for the Moroccan people,” Biden said Sunday on a trip to
Vietnam.
The earthquake cracked and
crumbled parts of the walls that surround Marrakech’s old city, a UNESCO World
Heritage site built in the 12th century. Videos showed dust emanating from
parts of the Koutoubia Mosque, one of the city’s best known historic sites.
The city is Morocco’s most
widely visited destination, known for its palaces, spice markets, tanneries and
Jemaa El Fna, its noisy square full of food vendors and musicians.
Friday’s earthquake was
Morocco’s strongest in over a century, but, though such powerful tremors are
rare, it isn’t the country’s deadliest.
Just over 60 years ago, the
country was rocked by a magnitude-5.8 quake that killed over 12,000 people on
its western coast, where the city of Agadir, southwest of Marrakech, crumbled.
That quake prompted changes in
construction rules in Morocco, but many buildings, especially rural homes, are
not built to withstand such tremors.
There had not been any
earthquakes stronger than magnitude 6.0 within 310 miles (500 kilometers) of
Friday’s tremor in at least a century, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Northern Morocco experiences earthquakes more often, including tremors of magnitude
6.4 in 2004 and magnitude 6.3 in 2016.
Elsewhere this year, a
magnitude-7.8 temblor that shook Syria and Turkey killed more than 21,600
people.
The most devastating earthquakes in recent history
have been above magnitude 7.0, including a 2015 tremor in Nepal that killed
over 8,800 people and a 2008 quake that killed 87,500 in China.
Emergency response efforts are
likely to continue as teams traverse mountain roads to reach villages hit
hardest by the earthquake. Many communities lack food, water, electricity and
shelter.
But once aid crews and
soldiers leave, the challenges facing hundreds of thousands who call the area
home will likely remain.
Members of the Moroccan
Parliament are scheduled to convene Monday to create a government fund for
earthquake response at the request of King Mohammed VI.
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