December 21, 2004
Iran: One Year After Quake, Bam Residents Rebuilding, But Psychological Scars Run Deep
by Golnaz Esfandiari
Victims of Bam's December 2004 earthquake
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A year ago, an earthquake of a magnitude of 6.6 destroyed the historic Iranian city of Bam and killed more than 25,000 people. Some 75,000 people were left homeless. Both of the city's hospitals collapsed, and 80 percent of homes, schools, and administrative buildings in the city and its surroundings were flattened. The quake also extensively damaged the 2,500-year-old citadel of Bam, the world's largest mud-brick structure.
Prague, 21 December 2004 (RFE/RL) -- At dawn on 26 December 2003, a powerful earthquake shook the southern Iranian city of Bam.
Due to poor materials and ignored building codes, most of Bam's houses and buildings were flattened. In a few seconds, tens of thousands of city residents were buried under tons of rubble.
In the end, more than 25,000 people were killed and many thousands left injured.
Most survivors lost not only their homes but their livelihoods. Immense sorrow and deep despair became part of daily life in Bam.
Doctor Sean Keogh, a consultant on emergency medicine, arrived in Bam 72 hours after the earthquake struck. Keogh, who works for Merlin, a British relief organization, says the scene was one of utter devastation.
"Much of the city was completely flat," Keogh says. "There were a few buildings standing normally, and the rest were kind of perched at a precarious angle. There was still a bit of rescue work going on, but the problem was that, because of the materials, when buildings had collapsed it didn't really leave any air pockets for people to breathe in. So most people who died died quite quickly, in the first one or two days. The structures in the rural areas that were made predominantly of mud were just completely flat, and you could barely tell that there had been a dwelling there at all. And some regions and some villages were completely obliterated."
One year later, the streets of Bam are still full of bricks and rubble, but there are also signs of life.