Haiti Earthquake 2010 Flashcards

1
Q

Where was Haiti in the UN Human Development Index?

A

Haiti was 145th of 169 countries in the UN Human Development Index,

which is the lowest in the Western Hemisphere

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2
Q

On how much were more than 70% of people in Haiti living?

A

More than 70% of people in Haiti were living on less than $1 per day

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3
Q

Where were 86% of people in Port au Prince living?

A

86% of people in Port au Prince were living in slum conditions - mostly tightly-packed, poorly-built, concrete buildings.

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4
Q

Where was 80% of education in Haiti provided?

A

80% of education in Haiti was provided in often poor-quality private schools,

the state system generally provided better education but provided far too few places

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5
Q

What was the access to latrines and water like?

A

Half of the people in Port-au-Prince had no access to latrines

and only one-third has access to tap water

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6
Q

What was the impact of the 12 January 2010 earthquake?

A

7.0 Magnitude Quake struck near Port au Prince

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7
Q

How many people were affected?

A

3,500,000 people were affected by the quake

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8
Q

How many people died?

A

220,000 people estimated to have died

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9
Q

How many people were injured?

A

300,000+ people were injured

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10
Q

What was the effect on housing?

know these roughly like 188k

A

Over 188,383 houses were badly damaged

and 105,000 were destroyed by the earthquake (293,383 in total),

1.5m people became homeless.

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11
Q

How much debris was there?

A

After the quake there were 19 million cubic metres of rubble and debris in Port au Prince

– enough to fill a line of shipping containers stretching end to end from London to Beirut.

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12
Q

How many schools were destroyed?

A

4,000 schools were damaged or destroyed

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13
Q

How many civil servants died in Port au Prince?

A

25% of civil servants in Port au Prince died

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14
Q

What % government and administrative buildings, % schools were destroyed or damaged?

A

60% of Government and administrative buildings, 80% of schools in Port-au-Prince and 60% of schools in the South and West Departments were destroyed or damaged

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15
Q

How many people left their home area in Port-au-Prince?

A

Over 600,000 people left their home area in Port-au-Prince.

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16
Q

Where did they stay?

A

They mostly stayed with host families

17
Q

Where were most people living at its peak?

A

At its peak, one and a half million people were living in camps

18
Q

Where were over 100.000 people at critical risk from?

A

Over 100,000 were at critical risk from storms and flooding.

19
Q

What was unrelated to the earthquake but caused aid response challenges?

A

Unrelated to the earthquake but causing aid response challenges was the outbreak of cholera in October 2010.

20
Q

How many had died by July 2011 as a result of the outbreak, and how many were infected?

A

5,899 had died and 216,000 were infected.

21
Q

Primary responses to the earthquake

A

Neighbouring Dominican Republic provided emergency water and medical supplies as well as heavy machinery to help with search and rescue underneath the rubble, but most people were left to dig through the rubble by hand.

Emergency rescue teams arrived from a number of countries, eg Iceland.

Medical teams began treating the injured – temporary field hospitals were set up by organisations like the International Committee of the Red Cross.

GIS was used to provide satellite images and maps of the area, to assist aid organisations.

People from around the world watched the news from Haiti on TV and through social networks. Many pledged money over their mobile phones.

United Nations troops and police were sent to help distribute aid and keep order.

22
Q

Secondary responses to the earthquake

A

Money was pledged by organisations and governments to assist in rebuilding. Including- $3.1 billion from international governments and $1.1 billion from 23 global charities.

After one year, there were still 1,300 camps.

‘Cash for work’ programs were paying Haitians to clear rubble.

Small farmers were being supported – so crops could be grown.

Schools were rebuilt.