SBA Disaster Loans Available in TN, CT, KY

Tornados, earthquakes, hurricanes, floods…the ways in which homes and businesses can be destroyed are nearly endless.

Right now there are a lot of businesses and homeowners in Tennessee, Connecticut and Kentucky dealing with the aftermath of natural disasters. It’s hard to find any good news in the middle of a disaster, but fortunately there is help available. SBA Disaster loans from the Small Business Administration can help homeowners, renters, profit and non-profit organizations to fund rebuilding. SBA loans can be an excellent way to help get things turned around.

The SBA disaster loans available offer up to $2 million to repair damaged or destroyed real estate. Homeowners and renters can receive loans up to $40,000 to repair or replace their personal property. The interest rates are very favorable, coming in at 2.75% for homeowners and renters, 3% for non-profit organizations and 4% for businesses. They can be paid back over as many as 30 years.

Disaster loans represent federal assistance for private sector disaster losses. The disaster loan program is not limited to small businesses, making it the only SBA assistance of its kind. The SBA tailors repayment to each borrower’s financial capability, therefore interest subsidies paid by the taxpayers are avoided or significant reduced. Just make sure you don’t wait to apply, as SBA disaster loans have deadlines.

If you would like to get in touch with the SBA to learn more about SBA Economic Injury Disaster Loans, go to www.sba.gov, or click here to go directly to the application. If you need a status update or to obtain Disaster Loan Program information you can call 1-800-659-2955 from 8AM to 6PM (EDT), Mon – Fri or email disastercustomerservice@sba.gov.

Bill Clinton aims to help Democrats retain Congress

(Reuters) – Bill “The Comeback Kid” Clinton is trying to help fellow Democrats rebound from poor public opinion ratings and retain control of the U.S. Congress in November 2 elections.

Politics | Natural Disasters

The former president helped Senator Blanche Lincoln overcome anti-incumbent fervor and win a bruising Democratic primary in their home state of Arkansas on June 8.

Last month, Clinton provided a hand in snuffing out Republican hopes of picking up a seat in the House of Representatives from Pennsylvania by stumping for Mark Critz, the Democrat who went on to win the race.

“A lot of people still like Bill Clinton, particularly Democrats,” said Quinnipiac University pollster Peter Brown. “They remember the Clinton years as prosperous and relatively peaceful.”

A Democratic Party aide said scores of House and Senate candidates have requested help from Clinton, who left office in 2001 with the U.S. enjoying record budget surpluses that have since become record deficits.

Clinton campaigned this month for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid as he fights for political survival in Nevada, and has helped Senate Democratic candidates in Florida and New York.

“We’re going to take as much of Bill Clinton as we can get,” said Senator Robert Menendez, the Senate Democratic campaign chairman. “No one can deliver a message better.”

While Clinton may give Democrats a boost, analysts say they do not expect him to end voter ire about the ailing economy and immunize his party against anticipated Election Day loses.

‘HE’S STILL TOXIC’

And they note that, particularly in Republican-dominated areas, Clinton could do Democrats more harm than good.

“Bill Clinton can’t be used everywhere. In some places, he’s still toxic,” said Paul Light, a political scientist at New York University.

Clinton earned the moniker “Comeback Kid” in his 1992 campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. A sex scandal nearly knocked him out, but he rallied to capture the White House.

He presided over relative peace and prosperity, yet his presidency was hit by another sex scandal that threatened to drive him from office. He survived and ended his second term in 2001 with a public approval rating of more than 60 percent.

But the sex scandals, the investigation of the Clintons’ investment in a failed real estate deal and the first lady’s ill-fated foray into healthcare reform helped make Clinton some inveterate enemies among conservative Republicans.

Democrats currently control the U.S. Senate and the House. The entire House and 36 Senate seats are up for grabs in the November elections. With opinion polls showing Congress with an approval rating of only about 25 percent, Republicans are expected to gain seats, but it is unclear if they will take control of either chamber.

Clinton’s own stock dipped during the campaign for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination that saw Barack Obama defeat Hillary Clinton.

Relations between the former and current president had become strained. But they improved after the former first lady became Obama’s secretary of state.

Last year, Bill Clinton went to Capitol Hill to help win passage of Obama’s plan to revamp the U.S. healthcare system.

‘BACK FROM THE BRINK’

“We’ve made real progress already — from bringing our economy back from the brink to delivering dramatic health insurance reform,” Clinton wrote in a recent letter to raise funds for House Democrats.

Clinton, 63, has remained on the world stage, largely with humanitarian efforts, including visits to Haiti early this year to help victims of the poor country’s devastating earthquake.

He has been slowed, but not stopped, since 2004 by a pair of heart surgeries, the most recent in February to open a blocked artery.

While Democrats embrace Clinton, Republicans avoid former Republican President George W. Bush. He left office in January 2009 with an approval rating about half that of Clinton’s.

Senator John Cornyn, the Senate Republican campaign committee chairman, said Democrats’ election-year problems are bigger than Clinton.

“What’s going to be an albatross around the neck of Democrats in November is the unpopular policies, spending and debt that people are responding to in dramatic fashion,” Cornyn said.

But Cornyn conceded Clinton can be a good fund-raiser. “The amount of money that a former president can help raise is something that I’m worried about,” he said.

(Additional reporting by Steve Holland; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

No damage reported from Japanese quake

(Reuters) – An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.2 jolted northern Japan on Sunday, the Japan Meteorological agency said, though there were no reports of damage and nuclear facilities in the area were unaffected.

World | Japan | Natural Disasters

The quake, at 12:33 p.m. (0333 GMT), was also felt in Tokyo.

The focus of the tremor was 40 km (25 miles) below sea level off the east coast of Fukushima prefecture, on Japan’s main island of Honshu, about 240 km (150 miles) northeast of Tokyo, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

No tsunami warning was issued.

Kyodo news agency said there was no injuries reported in either Fukushima prefecture or Miyagi prefecture to the north.

Tokyo Electric Power Co’s Fukushima No.1 and No.2 nuclear power plants were operating normally after the quake, a company spokesman said.

Tohoku Electric Power Co’s Onagawa nuclear plant in Miyagi prefecture and Higashidori nuclear plant in Aomori also continued their normal operations, company officials said.

Nippon Oil Corp’s Sendai refinery in Miyagi was continuing normal operations after the quake and there were no reports of damage, a refinery official said.

Japan Energy group refinery Kashima plant in Ibaraki prefecture, south of Fukushima, has been shut for scheduled maintenance and no damage was reported, a plant official said.

Sendai airport Miyagi prefecture halted flights briefly to check the runway before resuming operations, national broadcaster NHK said.

The bullet train that connects Tokyo and Aomori, northern Japan, temporarily suspended operations on part of the rail network after the quake, Kyodo said.

Earthquakes are common in Japan, one of the world’s most seismically active areas. The country accounts for about 20 percent of the world’s earthquakes of magnitude 6 or greater.

In October 2004, an earthquake with a magnitude of 6.8 struck the Niigata region in northern Japan, killing 65 people and injuring more than 3,000.

That was the deadliest quake since a magnitude 7.3 tremor hit the city of Kobe in 1995, killing more than 6,400.

(Reporting by Osamu Tsukimori, Hugh Lawson, Yoko Kubota and Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Magnitude 6.4 quake hits off India’s Andamans: USGS

(Reuters) – A magnitude 6.4 quake struck east of India’s Andaman Islands and triggered a local tsunami warning, the U.S. Geological Survey and Pacific Tsunami Warning Center reported on Monday.

World | Natural Disasters

The USGS said the quake struck at 1:21 a.m. on Tuesday (3:51 p.m. EDT on Monday) 75 miles east of Port Blair at a depth of 79.4 miles.

“Earthquakes of this size sometimes generate local tsunamis that can be destructive along coasts located within a few hundred kilometers (miles) of the earthquake epicenter,” the tsunami warning center said.

(Reporting by Sandra Maler; Editing by Peter Cooney)

First system forms before Atlantic hurricane season

The U.S. National Hurricane Centre started tracking the first low pressure system of the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season late Sunday, reminding energy and commodities traders of the coming storm season, which officially starts June 1 and ends Nov. 30.

The non-tropical low, located about 475 miles (764 km) southwest of Bermuda, was producing a large area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms over the southwestern Atlantic Ocean on Monday morning.

The NHC said the system has a medium chance, about 30 percent, of becoming a subtropical cyclone during the next 48 hours as it moves slowly toward the north-northwest and away from Florida and the oil rich Gulf of Mexico.

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) will release its 2010 hurricane season forecast on Thursday.

The forecast is widely watched by energy and commodity markets for signs of potential weather disruptions to oil and gas installations in the Gulf of Mexico during the hurricane season.

The NHC is part of NOAA’s National Weather Service.

Some meteorologists have already predicted conditions are ripe for an unusually destructive hurricane season, which could also disrupt efforts to clean up BP’s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Commodities traders also watch for storms that could damage agriculture crops such as citrus and cotton in Florida and other states along the coast to Texas.

In addition, the path of a storm can affect pricing of insurance-linked securities, which transfer insurance risks associated with natural disasters to capital markets investors.

(Reporting by Scott DiSavino; Editing by Marguerita Choy)

‘Boobquake’ cleric defends earthquake-promiscuity link

Washington, May 15 (ANI): The Iranian cleric, who claimed last month that promiscuity and immodest dress cause earthquakes, has defended his argument.

Kazem Sedighi insists God may be holding off on natural disasters in the West in order to let people sin more and relegate themselves to hell.

Sedighi’s preaching created a buzz on the web last month, as blogger Jennifer McCreight of Indiana asked women to show as much cleavage as possible through a Facebook page named Boobquake, reports Fox News.

Seidighi had said: “Many women who do not dress modestly … lead young men astray, corrupt their chastity and spread adultery in society, which (consequently) increases earthquakes.”

Now, the cleric is back defending his concept.

Sedighi notes that some might ask why there aren”t more earthquakes and storms striking Western nations that are “up to their necks” in immorality.

He says the answer is that God allows some of those who “provoke His wrath” to continue sinning “so that they (eventually) go to the bottom of Hell.”

Meanwhile, on the lines of ‘Boobquake,’ a new Facebook group called for ‘Brainquake’, a day for women to “show off their resumes, CVs, honors, prizes, and accomplishments.” (ANI)

Chairman Dr. Pachauri under the scanner as review of IPCC workings opens

Amsterdam (The Netherlands), May 14 (ANI): A review into the workings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is starting in Amsterdam.

IPCC chairman Rajendra Pachauri will be the first person to appear before the panel when it begins on Friday, and is expected to outline the organization”s rules and procedures.

Dr Pachauri is also under the scanner over some of his consultancy work, although an investigation in March by auditors KPMG cleared him of financial irregularities.

“Dr Pachauri is in a very difficult position, because some of the most vociferous critics of the IPCC hold him personally responsible for the panel”s perceived failings,” said Mr. Ward.

“Such critics are unlikely to be satisfied by anything other than Dr Pachauri”s departure,” he added.

According to the BBC, the review has been demanded by governments and commissioned by the UN, following allegations that the IPCC made a series of errors in its major 2007 report. The review was demanded during the February meeting of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) governing council.

The IPCC has admitted to one error, concerning the melting date of Himalayan glaciers, but robustly rebuts the wider charge.

The review panel was set up by the Inter-Academy Council, which comprises bodies such as the UK”s Royal Society.

“I”ve read many many comments about the IPCC and I”ve talked to people inside and outside the organization,” said Robbert Dijkgraaf, co-chair of the Inter-Academy Council.

“They feel the issue of climate change is so important that it really needs robust scientific counsel.
“The IPCC has grown in importance and it”s a very good time and a good opportunity to look at its management structure and its processes,” he told BBC News.

Dr. Dijkgraaf said the panel would be looking to draw on different shades of opinion over the next few months.

The panel”s costing of natural disasters has also come in for criticism

Ministers felt allegations about IPCC errors were undermining the body”s reputation and with it the reputation of its conclusions, on which many governments have based their climate policies.

Subsequently, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon asked the Inter-Academy Council to run the review.

The council is independent of the UN, and has the capacity to select from among the world”s top academics.

Dr. Dijkgraaf suggested Dr. Pachauri”s position was not an issue for the review, and pointed out that the IPCC had itself asked for an independent review.

The 12-strong review panel spans the physical and biological sciences and economics, and is drawn from the developed and developing worlds.

Its final recommendations will be presented to the IPCC in October, during a meeting aimed at finalizing structures and procedures for its next major evaluation of climate science and economics, due to conclude in 2013. (ANI)

India asks SAARC members to rally against terrorism

Thimphu (Bhutan), Apr.27 (ANI): India has asked other SAARC members to rally against forces of terrorism.

Addressing the SAARC Council of Ministers meeting here, Indian External Affairs Minister S M Krishna said: “Terrorism poses a serious danger to the economic stability of any civilized society. The South Asian region is particularly afflicted by this menace. The time has come for us to rally against the forces of terrorism that seek to divide and weaken our societies.”

India also asked fellow SAARC members to support the early ratification of regional instruments such as the Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters signed at the Colombo in 2008, and the proposed UN Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism (CCIT).

Krishna expressed the hope that crucial agreements on motor vehicles, railways, rapid response
to natural disasters, multilateral arrangement of conformity assessment activities of goods and services and regional MRA on product certification will also be finalized at the earliest.

Pakistan has reportedly vetoed the agreement on rapid response to natural disasters, citing security concerns. (ANI)

James Cameron Plants First of One Million Trees in Brazil

Avatar Director James Cameron and Actress Sigourney Weaver were in São Paulo
today to plant the first tree as part of a global partnership to plant one
million trees worldwide – an initiative between Twentieth Century Fox Home
Entertainment and Earth Day Network to coincide with the DVD and Blu-ray launch
of Avatar. Cameron planted the pau-brasil – a native Brazilian tree – which is a
powerful symbol of recouperation of the forests in that country and a species
that is 99% extinct. The tree was planted in Ibirapuera Park, the most important
and famous park in the city of São Paulo.

The partnership between Fox Home Entertainment and Earth Day Network, an
international non-profit organization that coordinates Earth Day programs around
the world, was announced by Cameron, in Los Angeles (USA) on March 23rd. The
planting of trees will be done in 15 countries starting today and will be
completed by the end of this year. The organization is committed to caring and
nurturing the trees to maturity, as well as considering natural disasters such
as fires and landslides during the planting process.

Photo Two

Avatar Director James Cameron and Actress Sigourney Weaver were in São Paulo
today to plant the first tree as part of a global partnership to plant one
million trees worldwide – an initiative between Twentieth Century Fox Home
Entertainment and Earth Day Network to coincide with the DVD and Blu-ray launch
of Avatar. Cameron planted the pau-brasil – a native Brazilian tree – which is a
powerful symbol of recouperation of the forests in that country and a species
that is 99% extinct. The tree was planted in Ibirapuera Park, the most important
and famous park in the city of São Paulo. Cameron and Weaver were joined by
prominent local officials, Antonio Herman de Benjamin, Justice of the High Court
of Brazil, Carlos Fortuner, Deputy Secretary of Municipality for the Environment
and Pedro Escorel de Azevedo, Associate Secretary of Municipality for the
Environment.

The partnership between Fox Home Entertainment and Earth Day Network, an
international non-profit organization that coordinates Earth Day programs around
the world, was announced by Cameron, in Los Angeles (USA) on March 23rd. The
planting of trees will be done in 15 countries starting today and will be
completed by the end of this year. The organization is committed to caring and
nurturing the trees to maturity, as well as considering natural disasters such
as fires and landslides during the planting process.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available:

http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6244849〈=en

Fox International Home Entertainment
Marla Rothschild, +1-310-369-5827
marla.rothschild@fox.com
Melissa Loseby, +1-310-369-2705
melissa.loseby@fox.com
or
North American Contacts:
Fox Home Entertainment
James Finn, +1-310-369-2940
james.finn@fox.com
Kavita Smith, +1-310-369-8435
kavita.smith@fox.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

James Cameron Plants First of One Million Trees in Brazil

Avatar Director James Cameron and Actress Sigourney Weaver were in São Paulo
today to plant the first tree as part of a global partnership to plant one
million trees worldwide – an initiative between Twentieth Century Fox Home
Entertainment and Earth Day Network to coincide with the DVD and Blu-ray launch
of Avatar. Cameron planted the pau-brasil – a native Brazilian tree – which is a
powerful symbol of recouperation of the forests in that country and a species
that is 99% extinct. The tree was planted in Ibirapuera Park, the most important
and famous park in the city of São Paulo.

The partnership between Fox Home Entertainment and Earth Day Network, an
international non-profit organization that coordinates Earth Day programs around
the world, was announced by Cameron, in Los Angeles (USA) on March 23rd. The
planting of trees will be done in 15 countries starting today and will be
completed by the end of this year. The organization is committed to caring and
nurturing the trees to maturity, as well as considering natural disasters such
as fires and landslides during the planting process.

Photo Two

Avatar Director James Cameron and Actress Sigourney Weaver were in São Paulo
today to plant the first tree as part of a global partnership to plant one
million trees worldwide – an initiative between Twentieth Century Fox Home
Entertainment and Earth Day Network to coincide with the DVD and Blu-ray launch
of Avatar. Cameron planted the pau-brasil – a native Brazilian tree – which is a
powerful symbol of recouperation of the forests in that country and a species
that is 99% extinct. The tree was planted in Ibirapuera Park, the most important
and famous park in the city of São Paulo. Cameron and Weaver were joined by
prominent local officials, Antonio Herman de Benjamin, Justice of the High Court
of Brazil, Carlos Fortuner, Deputy Secretary of Municipality for the Environment
and Pedro Escorel de Azevedo, Associate Secretary of Municipality for the
Environment.

The partnership between Fox Home Entertainment and Earth Day Network, an
international non-profit organization that coordinates Earth Day programs around
the world, was announced by Cameron, in Los Angeles (USA) on March 23rd. The
planting of trees will be done in 15 countries starting today and will be
completed by the end of this year. The organization is committed to caring and
nurturing the trees to maturity, as well as considering natural disasters such
as fires and landslides during the planting process.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available:

http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6244849〈=en

Fox International Home Entertainment
Marla Rothschild, +1-310-369-5827
marla.rothschild@fox.com
Melissa Loseby, +1-310-369-2705
melissa.loseby@fox.com
or
North American Contacts:
Fox Home Entertainment
James Finn, +1-310-369-2940
james.finn@fox.com
Kavita Smith, +1-310-369-8435
kavita.smith@fox.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

ASEAN summit aims for ‘community’ amid Thai unrest

Southeast Asian leaders will talk about building a strong economic and political community on Thursday at an annual summit clouded by unrest in Thailand and Myanmar’s widely derided election plans.

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva cancelled his trip to Hanoi for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations’ summit after declaring a state of emergency on Wednesday to control a month-long anti-government protest aimed at forcing an election.

“The situation in Bangkok is worrying,” Singapore Foreign Minister George Yeo said. “It is a sombre backdrop to our discussions.

“ASEAN is not a collective grouping only for good times. The character of ASEAN is informed by how we react to crises, whether it is to natural disasters or man-made crises.”

The 10-member ASEAN has been largely focused on economic and diplomatic issues since it was founded in 1967 at the height of the Vietnam War.

But in 2008, it adopted a charter that turned the region of 580 million people with a combined GDP of $2.7 trillion into a rules-based bloc that aims to become a political, economic and security community over the next five years.

DISPUTE SETTLEMENT MECHANISM

Foreign ministers on Thursday signed a protocol establishing a Dispute Settlement Mechanism that aims to resolve arguments between ASEAN member states, such as over territory.

The terms of reference and procedures are still being worked out, however, and will only be finalised at an ASEAN ministerial meeting in July.

“The Charter doesn’t limit or stipulate the kind of disputes that would brought before the dispute resolution mechanism,” Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa told reporters after the signing ceremony. “Certainly from our perspective it would be better not to be too limiting.”

But he said it would not be used in any country’s internal disputes or human rights issues — in Myanmar, for instance.

“Normally, the dispute settlement mechanism would be interstate, not intrastate, between ASEAN member states. It would be a huge stretch to apply it to a situation within a country,” he said when asked if it could be used to pressure Myanmar.

The Myanmar envoy was asked about widely dismissed election plans at a working dinner of ASEAN foreign ministers on Wednesday, said several participants, including Yeo.

“Their internal processes are still going on, intense discussions, I hope, between the government and the political parties and I hope within the political parties themselves, but the coming months will be critical months for Myanmar,” he said.

Indonesia and the Philippines have publicly criticised Myanmar’s election laws, which ban political prisoners, such as opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, from running.

Her National League for Democracy, which won the last election in 1990 by a landslide but was kept from governing, is boycotting this one. That move could make it difficult for the junta to portray the polls as free, fair, inclusive and credible.

Myanmar has so far kept the polling date a secret.

GENTLE APPROACH

ASEAN has never censured Myanmar over its rights record and is unlikely to do so this time. But summit leaders are likely to tell the junta’s representative, Prime Minister Thein Sein, that Myanmar is hurting the group’s image and credibility.

“The Myanmar issue still presents a problem when we want to take ASEAN forward to negotiate and deal with other groupings and countries,” Thai Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya said. “It presents a major limitation for us.”

ASEAN has always taken a gentle approach to its most truculent member.

“We are not in a position to punish Myanmar,” Yeo said.

“The reality of the strategic situation is Myanmar’s two biggest neighbours, China and India, will continue to engage the country. For this reason, the U.S. embargo has not worked.

“ASEAN takes a very realpolitik position, which is that if China and India remain engaged in Myanmar, we have to. It is better that Myanmar remain in the ASEAN sphere than being a buffer state in between the two biggest countries on earth.”

(Additional reporting by Ambika Ahuja and Simon Rabinovitch; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Donors pledge billions for Haiti aid

(Reuters) – International donors on Wednesday pledged $5.3 billion to Haiti, exceeding expectations in a worldwide drive to rebuild the country after January’s shattering earthquake.

World | Natural Disasters

Ban told reporters at the end of a one-day donors conference at U.N. headquarters that the pledges were “far beyond expectations.” The world body had hoped to raise $3.9 billion at the conference to help the impoverished Caribbean nation over the next two years.

Some 120 countries also made a total longer-term commitment of some $9 billion, a figure that includes the $5.3 billion in shorter term aid. “This is the down payment Haiti needs for wholesale national renewal. It is the way to build back better,” Ban said.

Ban had called for quick donations in response to a U.N. request for $1.4 billion in immediate humanitarian assistance for Haiti, which even before the January 12 earthquake was the poorest country in the western hemisphere.

So far, the request has only been half funded, fueling fears that the rainy season will compound the disaster for some 1.2 million Haitians left homeless by the disaster.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, co-host of Wednesday’s meeting, said the United States would pledge $1.15 billion for long-term recovery, which she said must be planned and executed by Haiti’s government.

“Aid is important but aid has never saved a country. Our goal must be the empowerment of the Haitian people. They’re the ones who will carry on the work of rebuilding Haiti long after our involvement has ended,” she said.

Clinton was joined at the meeting by her husband, former U.S. President Bill Clinton, the U.N. special envoy for Haiti who will coordinate relief efforts for the country.

A HAITIAN PLAN

The U.N. meeting seeks to raise funds for a Haitian government recovery plan that includes decentralizing the economy to create jobs and wealth outside Port-au-Prince, the capital of some 4 million people.

Haitian President Rene Preval thanked donors and told reporters his country “must take advantage of this opportunity that we now have.”

“I appeal to my fellow Haitians to understand the effort that has now been made by the international community and the responsibility that we now have in the interests of our country to respond rapidly and appropriately,” Preval said.

Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said his government, which saw all but one of its ministries destroyed, had a vision for Haiti’s future but needed urgent help.

Aid agencies say the task is huge. Haiti suffered as many as 300,000 people killed in the magnitude 7.0 earthquake, which crippled the government and caused damage estimated at between $8 and $14 billion.

Ban said the United Nations would use an Internet-based system to track whether the funds were being spent as agreed.

In the crowded, squalid quake survivors’ camps of Port-au-Prince, thousands clamored for basic necessities. Overnight rains soaked fragile shelters and turned dusty alleyways to mud.

“We need water, food, toilets, healthcare, light and tents — shelter,” said Silverin Nono, the leader of a camp that has mushroomed across a barren, garbage-strewn hillside called Bas-Canaan north of the city.

International aid agency Oxfam said although the total funding pledged was impressive, countries must ensure it is new money, “not recycled money taken from other humanitarian crises.”

“The poor and vulnerable of other disasters should not be paying for this,” said Oxfam spokesman Philippe Mathieu.

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said that if the world community fulfills its pledges, Haiti’s economy could grow at an average 8 percent in coming years — almost 50 percent faster than under previous IMF forecasts.

“That’s possible, but condition one is to have the Haitian authorities really in the driver’s seat,” he told reporters.

(Additional reporting by Pascal Fletcher in Port-au-Prince; Lou Charbonneau at the United Nations, Lesley Wroughton in Washington, editing by Chris Wilson)

Biblical plagues happened in reality, say scientists

London, March 30 (ANI): Scientists have claimed that the Biblical plagues that devastated Ancient Egypt in the Old Testament really happened and were the result of global warming and a volcanic eruption.

According to a report in The Telegraph, researchers believe they have found evidence of real natural disasters on which the ten plagues of Egypt, which led to Moses freeing the Israelites from slavery in the Book of Exodus in the Bible, were based.

Archaeologists now widely believe the plagues occurred at an ancient city of Pi-Rameses on the Nile Delta, which was the capital of Egypt during the reign of Pharaoh Rameses the Second, who ruled between 1279BC and 1213BC.

The city appears to have been abandoned around 3,000 years ago and scientists claim the plagues could offer an explanation.

Climatologists studying the ancient climate at the time have discovered a dramatic shift in the climate in the area occurred towards the end of Rameses the Second”s reign.

They found that Rameses reign coincided with a warm, wet climate, but then the climate switched to a dry period.

The scientists believe this switch in the climate was the trigger for the first of the plagues.

The rising temperatures could have caused the river Nile to dry up.

This marks the arrival of the first plague, which in the Bible is described as the Nile turning to blood.

According to Dr Stephan Pflugmacher, a biologist at the Leibniz Institute for Water Ecology and Inland Fisheries in Berlin, this description could have been the result of a toxic fresh water algae.

He said that the bacterium, known as Burgundy Blood algae, is known to have existed 3,000 years ago and still causes similar effects today.

“It multiplies massively in slow-moving warm waters with high levels of nutrition. And as it dies, it stains the water red,” he said.

The scientists also claim that the arrival of this algae set in motion the events that led to the second, third and forth plagues – frogs, lice and flies.

The arrival of the toxic algae would have triggered such a transformation and forced the frogs to leave the water where they lived.

But as the frogs died, it would have meant that mosquitoes, flies and other insects would have flourished without the predators to keep their numbers under control.

This, according to the scientists, could have led in turn to the fifth and sixth plagues – diseased livestock and boils.

The explosion of the volcano Thera, which was part of the Mediterranean islands of Santorini, just north of Crete, around 3,500 years ago, is now also thought to be responsible for triggering the seventh, eighth and ninth plagues that bring hail, locusts and darkness to Egypt.

The cause of the final plague, the death of the first borns of Egypt, has been suggested as being caused by a fungus that may have poisoned the grain supplies, of which male first born would have had first pickings and so been first to fall victim. (ANI)

Chanting Haitian voodoo celebrants honor quake dead

(Reuters) – Dressed in white, shaking decorated gourd rattles and singing praises to “Olorum Papa” (God the Father), several hundred practitioners of Haiti’s voodoo religion held a public ceremony on Sunday to honor those killed in the January 12 earthquake.

World | Natural Disasters

While several Christian ceremonies have been held to mourn the hundreds of thousands of quake dead, this was the first national commemoration by Haiti’s voodoo religion, which has had to defend itself against accusations by some Evangelical preachers that it somehow caused the deadly natural disaster.

The supreme head of Haiti’s voodoo religion, Max Beauvoir — an elderly, bespectacled man dressed in an embroidered white robe and bonnet — presided over the ceremony in a central Port-au-Prince square. It coincided with the Catholic feast day of Palm Sunday, the start of Easter Holy Week.

More than half of Haiti’s nearly 10 million people are believed to practice voodoo, a religion brought from West Africa several centuries ago by slaves forced to work on the plantations of their white masters in what was then the rich French Caribbean colony of Saint Domingue. The religion is recognized by Haiti’s state and protected by the constitution.

“Olorum Papa, hear our cry to you,” chanted the worshipers. The women wore white robes, some trimmed with lace and embroidery, and black headscarves; the men white shirts and trousers, some with black hats.

To the sound of rattles and drums, the celebrants held a Booroum, a voodoo ritual which they believe sends the souls of the dead “under water” so they can be cleansed and return to life as better beings.

“Hounkou Bolokou Djavohoun Bohoun”, chorused the worshipers, repeating an ancient voodoo incantation intended to encourage the souls of the dead.

“The people who died did not die, they went to another world, to live, under water,” Beauvoir, who was educated at City College of New York and the Sorbonne in Paris, told the crowd from a stage, surrounded by other “houngan” or voodoo priests.

VOODOO ‘GIVES US FREEDOM’

“Ai Bobo (Amen),” shouted the celebrants, some of whom also wore black armbands. Some greeted each other with an elaborate salutation between voodoo adherents that involves a complex handshake and embrace.

“It’s voodoo that gives us freedom,” one houngan, Jean Claude Bazile, told Reuters, recalling that it had survived as a living religion since playing an important part in Haiti’s independence in 1804. It was a revolt by black slaves, many of them voodoo practitioners, that triggered the overthrow of French colonial rule.

Bazile rejected public statements made by some local Evangelical preachers since the quake, who he said had tried to discredit voodoo by telling people that the African-born religion was responsible for bringing on the earthquake.

“Voodoo is not for making evil, but good,” he said.

“The other religions want to crush us, they think we’re too strong,” he said. “Everyone was hit by the earthquake, it was Nature,” Bazile added.

After the catastrophic quake, which the government says may have killed more than 300,000 people, Beauvoir complained to President Rene Preval about the anonymous mass burials of tens of thousands of dead, which he said went against voodoo and Haitian culture.

Dumping the dead in hurriedly excavated mass graves without proper rites is seen as desecration in a country where many believe in zombies — dead bodies brought back to life by supernatural forces who could persecute the living.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Haiti, donors face huge task to “build back better”

(Reuters) – “Retou ala Vi. Ayiti Pap Peri” (Back to life, Haiti will not die) reads the banner in Creole stretched up beside a crowded camp of earthquake survivors in the heart of the wrecked capital Port-au-Prince.

World | Natural Disasters

Life, in the form of bustling pedestrians, chaotic traffic and teeming street markets, has indeed bounced back in the city after the devastating January 12 quake that killed maybe more than 300,000 and turned streets into jumbles of rubble.

But a massive task of reconstructing the quake-shattered capital and its dependent nation — a small Caribbean state that was already a byword for poverty in the Western Hemisphere — now faces Haiti’s government and donors when they meet in New York on Wednesday to pledge funds and agree to strategies.

President Rene Preval and the country’s foreign partners have stressed that the rebuilding should seek not just to put back what was lost — the destroyed buildings, schools and hospitals — but lift Haiti out of the cycle of instability and underdevelopment that has kept it mired in misery for decades.

“Haiti is on its knees, we must get it to stand back up,” Preval said in a recent speech to private entrepreneurs.

Estimates of damage inflicted by the magnitude 7.0 quake, viewed by some as the most deadly natural disaster in recent history, range between $8 billion and $14 billion.

Participants in Wednesday’s conference will look to secure not only a major envelope of funds — an initial figure contemplates $3.8 billion over 18 months, much more for the longer term — but also a viable blueprint for Haiti’s successful future development.

This will try to tackle some of the restraints that have locked Haiti in a poverty trap for years.

Proposals include an urgent decentralization strategy to create jobs and wealth outside the capital of some 4 million people — more than a third of the country’s population — which has so monopolized national economic life that Haitians jokingly refer to it as the “Republic of Port-au-Prince.”

There are also calls to rally private investment to the reconstruction effort, for example in textile manufacturing, tourism, and agriculture, where cheap subsidized imports of rice and sugar have kept Haitian peasant farmers relegated to dirt-poor subsistence farming.

Supporters of Haiti, who include former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who spent his honeymoon there and is now the special United Nations coordinator for the relief effort, say the disaster provides an opportunity to “build back better.”

“This country has the best chance to escape its past that it’s ever had,” Clinton said last week in a visit to Haiti. “As horrible as this is, it gives them a chance to start again.”

STILL AN EMERGENCY OPERATION

But this hopeful vision must be set against the deep pessimism that seems to affect many ordinary Haitians, accustomed as they are to seeing the country’s resources, and foreign largesse, being monopolized by a small elite. The specter of corruption looms large in the national conscience.

“There might be some more money (from the donors), but those who need it won’t receive it,” said mother of three Gilene Morquette, as she jostled in a crush of women waiting to receive a Save the Children aid handout at a sprawling quake survivors’ camp in the city’s Petionville golf club.

Skepticism also gripped 47-year-old barber Raymond Martin as he showed reporters his destroyed barber shop in the ruined downtown city center. He lost a child in the quake.

“For Haiti to have a chance, the foreigners must be the ones who reconstruct,” he said. “I don’t want Haitians to govern, we should have a foreign protectorate here,” he said, touching off a debate on the still rubble-strewn street side.

There will be no foreign protectorate — donors and aid partners are careful to insist that Haiti’s government directs the reconstruction — but monitoring mechanisms are being included in plans to finance the rebuilding effort.

The World Bank is due to act as “fiscal agent” of a Multi-Donors Trust Fund to be created for Haiti.

But while the government and donors plan reconstruction, aid workers are urging them not to ignore the immediate needs of the more than 1 million homeless quake survivors who are still camped out precariously in streets and open spaces, vulnerable to the approaching rains and hurricane season.

“For us, this remains an emergency operation,” said Iain Logan, head of Haiti operations of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

He saw Haiti’s rebuilding as a bigger challenge even than the reconstruction after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. “In my professional lifetime, we’ve never had to rebuild a capital city, on which the whole country was fundamentally based.”

The European Union and a coalition of U.S.-based humanitarian groups have indicated they are likely to pledge more than $2.7 billion for Haiti at the New York conference.

U.S. President Barack Obama has asked Congress for $2.8 billion in funds for Haiti relief and reconstruction costs.

But there is recognition this will be a long job. “No one walks away from the scenes of devastation I’ve seen … within 18 months. This is for the long haul,” said British International Development Minister Mike Foster, after a visit last week.

(Editing by Eric Beech)

Factbox:Haiti’s quake recovery needs run into billions

(Reuters) – Haiti’s government, foreign donors and humanitarian groups will attend a pledging conference in New York Wednesday aimed at securing funds and agreeing to a blueprint for the country’s reconstruction after the devastating January 12 earthquake.

World | Natural Disasters

Here are some facts on the estimated scale of the damage inflicted by the quake, and the needs and strategies being considered to rebuild the Caribbean country.

DEATHS AND DAMAGE

- Haiti’s government has reported 222,570 people killed in the quake, but President Rene Preval says the real final death toll could be over 300,000. A similar number were injured.

- Around 1.5 million people were left homeless and displaced by the disaster. Around 600,000 fled the wrecked capital Port-au-Prince.

- Haiti’s government has estimated the economic damage and loss from the quake at close to $8 billion. Economists from the Inter-American Development Bank had previously given an estimated damage range of between $8 billion and nearly $14 billion.

- In Port-au-Prince, which concentrates 65 percent of Haiti’s economic activity, more than 100,000 homes were destroyed and over 200,000 damaged. More than 1,300 education centers and more than 50 hospitals and clinics collapsed. The country’s main port, presidential palace, parliament, justice palace and most ministries were destroyed.

- Leogane, a town southwest of Port-au-Prince, was 80 percent destroyed.

ESTIMATED NEEDS, RESPONSES

- In a report to donors and development experts preparing for the New York meeting, Haiti’s government estimated that $11.5 billion would be needed for the country’s reconstruction.

- A preliminary target amount of $3.8 billion was foreseen for an 18-month period starting October 1, 2010, to fulfill needs identified in the Post-Disaster Needs Assessment. World Bank officials have called this a “short-term target,” and there is recognition that much more is needed over the longer term.

- Haiti’s government is also asking for an immediate $350 million in direct budgetary support to help maintain essential state services and civil servant salaries and plug the gap caused by a drop-off in revenues following the quake.

- The European Union and a coalition of U.S.-based humanitarian groups have already indicated they are likely to pledge more than $2.7 billion in aid at the New York meeting.

- The governing board of the Inter-American Development Bank agreed last week to give $479 million in post-earthquake debt forgiveness and other relief to Haiti.

- U.S. President Barack Obama has asked Congress for $2.8 billion in funds for Haiti relief and reconstruction costs.

RECONSTRUCTION STRATEGIES

- The rebuilding plan being considered by donors foresees the creation of a Multi-Donors Trust Fund, to be managed by Haiti’s government and representatives of donors.

- Also envisaged is the setting up of an Interim Reconstruction Commission, to be chaired by Haiti’s prime minister and a United Nations representative, along with the establishment of a Reconstruction Agency for the longer term.

- Haiti’s government and donor partners are insisting on a decentralization strategy to be at the heart of the reconstruction plan. This will seek to “decompress” and decongest the crowded and wrecked capital and set up economic development poles in the rest of the country, to create jobs and industries.

- President Rene Preval has told private investors he sees them as the “backbone” of the reconstruction effort. One Haitian private investor, the Mevs family’s WIN Group, has already announced a major redevelopment and expansion project with a Florida-based company for the Varreux port terminal.

- The government and donors also foresee major reform and investment to revitalize Haiti’s weak, peasant-based farm sector, aiming for increased domestic production to reduce dependency on imported rice, sugar and poultry.

(Reporting by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Eric Beech)

Scenarios: Race against time to solve Haiti post-quake problems

(Reuters) – The Haitian government and foreign partners will attend a donor pledging conference in New York on Wednesday, seeking solutions and funds to address continuing humanitarian needs in Haiti following the January 12 earthquake, and to guarantee its future stability and growth.

World | Natural Disasters

Here are some of the risks involved in this initiative:

DONOR FUNDING MUST BE SUFFICIENT TO MEET NEEDS

Humanitarian and development groups say the donors’ response must be “substantial” to confront what experts are calling a unique disaster management challenge — the rebuilding of a wrecked capital, Port-au-Prince, that concentrated 65 percent of Haiti’s economic activity and generated 80 percent of its fiscal revenues.

With needs estimates ranging from the several billions of dollars to as high as $14 billion or more, over delivery periods from 18 months to 10 or 20 years, Haiti’s partners stress the international commitment must be long-term.

“We can’t get frustrated, we can’t get bored, we can’t get distracted,” said former U.S. President Bill Clinton, named by the United Nations as special coordinator for the relief operation.

Judging from public statements made by governments and aid groups, there is a willingness to commit financing to help Haiti both in the short-term and over the longer period.

Nevertheless, U.N. humanitarian chief John Holmes said earlier this month the world body was struggling to provide support as donor nations had been slow to hand over aid.

There is widespread recognition that any shortfall in funding could be disastrous.

This could leave the weakened Haitian government struggling to provide even the most basic services, or pay its civil servants. It could also delay supplies of adequate shelter and other help to the more than 1 million homeless quake survivors, increasing their vulnerability in the face of the upcoming rains, and the hurricane season starting June 1.

Any withholding or drying up of donor funding for Haiti would dramatically raise the risk of protests by quake survivors, who have already been complaining that the government was slow to respond to the disaster.

NEED TO FINANCE DEVELOPMENT, NOT DEPENDENCY

Most experts stress that the world’s support for Haiti going forward must look to not just satisfy immediate humanitarian needs but also back a development strategy that pulls the country out of decades of poverty and instability.

Haiti, the Western Hemisphere’s poorest state which has been prone to natural disasters, had already become dependent on foreign aid, thus depriving the Haitian government of responsibility and legitimacy in the eyes of its own people.

Any prolongation of this situation of being a “Republic of NGOs (non-governmental organizations),” in which the government remains weak and ineffective, will only keep the country stuck in the cycle of poverty and underdevelopment which it has suffered for years.

“God Bless the NGOs … (but) the NGOs need to put themselves out of business, because, as long as we’re begging for money, consistently, Haiti is never going to be economically self-sustainable, independent,” says Regine Barjon of the Haitian-American Chamber of Commerce.

Donors are hoping that the post-quake recovery can provide the opportunity for Haiti’s government to take charge of its own development and future, without constantly relying on foreign handouts and intervention.

This will require financed programs to empower the Haitian state and its public institutions.

Such an economic independence strategy also calls for determined decentralization and the creation of jobs and industries outside the top-heavy capital Port-au-Prince, to prevent the kind of urban migration and crowding that made the earthquake such a killer.

“If conditions in the countryside are not improved, the displaced will ultimately return to Port-au-Prince, to replicate the dangerous dynamics of earlier decades,” said Robert Maguire, a Haiti expert from Trinity Washington University and the United States Institute of Peace.

UNREST, CORRUPTION, TURBULENT POLITICS ARE ALL RISKS

As captured in Graham Greene’s novel “The Comedians,” Haiti, which won independence from France in 1804 after a slave revolt, has a reputation as a country of tropical intrigue, corruption and explosive social and political violence.

President Rene Preval’s government, which had gained a good reputation among international partners for being reform-minded and business-oriented, was crippled by the quake, losing ministry buildings and scores of trained civil servants.

Many quake victims have grumbled that the president, a mild-mannered agronomist, and his government have been slow to attend to their needs — some even say they would prefer a foreign “protectorate” to run the country, which will not happen, but is a measure of the popular mistrust.

Supporters of former President Bertrand Aristide, who left Haiti in 2004 amid a rebellion, have staged noisy protests criticizing Preval’s performance but these have so far posed no serious threat to order, which is still maintained by U.N. peacekeepers and U.S. troops backing Haitian police.

Corruption has been part of the political fabric in Haiti for decades, with past dictators like the Duvaliers, Francois “Papa Doc” and his son Jean-Claude “Baby Doc,” teaming up with powerful local and foreign businessmen to keep the bulk of the mostly rural population crushed under grinding poverty.

There is widespread suspicion among ordinary Haitians that the foreign-financed recovery will benefit the “Big Men” and elites, leaving the “little people” no better off than before.

Haiti’s government and donors will have to work hard and produce concrete results to change these perceptions.

A blueprint recovery plan stresses “good governance” and “transparency” and “expresses a commitment to hold elections in Haiti as soon as possible to avoid a political vacuum.”

Preval says he will not seek to extend his term beyond its scheduled conclusion on February 11, 2011, and says he is confident that legislative elections — originally scheduled for February 28 — can be organized in time to ensure an orderly transition.

But with hundreds of escaped felons still on the run since the quake, and several kidnappings of foreigners reported, the risk of more crime and unrest is high, as is the possibility of illegal Haitian migrants heading for U.S. shores if recovery does not deliver results to Haiti’s long-suffering people.

(Reporting by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Eric Beech)

Cyclone victims warned of dodgy tradies

The State Government is concerned unlicensed tradespeople may take advantage of vulnerable north Queenslanders rebuilding after Cyclone Ului.

The Office of Fair Trading says it often receives information about itinerant traders after natural disasters.

Queensland Minister for Fair Trading Peter Lawlor says itinerant traders could band together and target homes damaged by the cyclone.

Mr Lawlor says dodgy traders should be reported to the Office of Fair Trading as soon as possible.

“We’re just putting out a warning to all dodgy itinerant traders that they’ll be met with the full force of the law if they target these vulnerable families that are involved in the clean-up and rebuilding,” Mr Lawlor said.

“Unfortunately these dodgy handymen do prey on these vulnerable people at this time because the natural disasters seem to attract these type of people.”

Mr Lawlor warns residents to get quotes and to ask to see a Building Services Authority licence.

“They also should where possible check websites or call the head office of these people,” he said.

“The traders should have identity cards, full names and addresses.”

Build well to save lives in disasters, experts urge

Attaching shutters to windows or embedding steel bars in new structures are some of the simple measure that should be employed to stop buildings from killing occupants in natural disasters, experts say.

Poor construction in Haiti was a major reason why so many people — up to 300,000 according to the president — died when a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck the impoverished nation in January, architects and disaster specialists said.

And in quake-prone Chile where an earthquake and a subsequent tsunami killed about 500 people in February, the government is investigating to what extent rules on fortifying buildings against seismic shocks were followed.

“You don’t need to be helpless, you can build safer, you can build better to reduce both the financial cost but of course also the life (cost),” Margareta Wahlstrom, U.N. Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction told Reuters by telephone.

“It’s not the earthquake that kills people, it’s the buildings that collapse in the earthquake.”

While some countries put great emphasis on erecting buildings that can survive tropical storms, floods or earthquakes, many others lag far behind, she said.

Safe construction is not part of international development policies either, Wahlstrom said, adding that she hopes it will now be included after Haiti and Chile.

A step in that direction is a new handbook for rebuilding after natural disasters released by the World Bank last week.

Building well matters also because in the months and years after a disaster, reconstruction is where the biggest sums of international aid money go once emergency needs — for tents, medicines and so on — have been dealt with.

INTELLIGENT DESIGN

Safer buildings alone will not always prevent deaths. Houses should be located away from hazardous areas, where possible, and combined with an early warning system, evacuation plans and public education on what to do when a disaster strikes.

But as part of an overall strategy to minimise deaths and destruction, intelligent building design is one of the most straightforward solutions.

For example, shutters on windows will prevent wind from blowing through the building and lifting it off the ground. Tying the roof to the walls will stop it from being blown off.

To protect new buildings against earthquakes, walls can be reinforced with criss-crossing diagonal steel beams or concrete columns. Such — often life-saving — features add less than 10 percent on average to building costs, experts say.

Designs should take account of what resources are affordable and available locally. For example, in areas where water is short, building concrete houses is not viable as making concrete requires a lot of water.

EASIER DRAWN THAN DONE

While there is no shortage of clever ideas, implementation can be complicated, especially in developing countries.

For a start, most people in poor nations live in houses that they have built themselves, mostly without an understanding of structural engineering or knowledge of ways to make them safer.

Rolling out a nationwide campaign for safer construction of homes may have the greatest impact in the long term, experts from engineering firm Arup say.

However, organisations involved in post-disaster reconstruction can help by building houses that can be easily replicated by local people. Those willing to build their own homes can be trained how to build with disasters in mind.

Training in how to build safely is one of the services that a new consulting centre in Haiti’s capital will provide.

Architecture for Humanity, a non-profit design and building group, is planning to open the centre in April for three years.

In countries where corruption is rife, all building work should be monitored closely to ensure no money or materials go astray and construction standards are respected.

Those leading rebuilding efforts after a disaster, should involve local people in the design and construction as much as possible, experts say.

“The one thing you can do in a disaster is use the reconstruction as a mechanism to create jobs,” Cameron Sinclair, co-founder of Architecture for Humanity, told Reuters.

“Within about a year, after being in those tents so long, the community’s number one issue is not housing but jobs,” he said in a telephone interview.

Once survivors of a disaster occupy a new home, they may want to change it by knocking down a wall or adding on, both of which could weaken the carefully designed building.

“Organisations should allow for this in their housing designs, and provide training so that people know how to adapt or extend their homes safely,” Arup architects say.

House designs should suit also suit tastes and culture.

Otherwise, as aid group Oxfam put it in a blog, “the charitable gesture by the giver becomes the hat you wouldn’t wear in a million years or, in the case of disaster survivors, the house that drives you crazy”.

(Editing by Paul Casciato)

(For more news on humanitarian issues please visit www.alertnet.org or email alertnetnewsdesk@reuters.com)

Aftershock hits off coast of Chile, no damage

(Reuters) – A magnitude 6.7 aftershock struck off the coast of Chile on Monday night about 45 miles northwest of Concepcion, which was heavily damaged in an 8.8 magnitude quake on February 27, but the national emergency office said no casualties or damage to infrastructure had been reported.

World | Natural Disasters

The epicenter of the aftershock was 21.7 miles deep in the Pacific Ocean, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

“The characteristics of this quake do not merit a tsunami (alert). The situation is normal,” said Vicente Nunez, the head of the national emergency office, known by its acronym ONEMI, adding that there were no reports of casualties or damage to infrastructure.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said historical data indicated the aftershock would not generate a tsunami but advised authorities in much of the Pacific region to be aware of the possibility.

The devastating quake and ensuing tsunamis late last month killed about 500 people and tore up roads and towns. It caused an estimated $30 billion in damage to infrastructure, homes and industry, the government said last week.

(Reporting by Antonio de la Jara; Writing by Eduardo Garcia)