Earthquake Preparedness

Nepali Times issue #231 21 – 27 January 2004.

The December 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami led to an increased awareness about earthquake preparedness among Kathmandu residents. Since then, Nepal has experienced one major and many  moderate earthquakes and there is a looming seismic gap in western Nepal. This year we also marks the tenth anniversary of the 7.8M earthquake in 26 April 2015 that killed over 9,000 people.

Excerpts of the report published 20 years ago this week on issue #231 21 – 27 January 2004:

Some good comes out of even the most tragic events. Publicity of the havoc created by the Sumatra earthquake and the tsunami it unleashed in the Bay of Bengal last month has done more for earthquake awareness in Kathmandu than anything else in recent times.

That is why Mona Pradhan, 33, took her husband to Mangal Bajar this week to visit the Seventh Annual Earthquake Safety Exhibition. Mona was quizzing mason, Janak Maharjan, about the exact construction methods he used to make a life size demonstration earthquake-resistant model of brick walls and reinforced concrete beams.

“We are building a house and we wanted to make sure it can withstand earthquakes,” she told us.

Nepal Society for Earthquake Technology (NSET) which has been organising the annual exhibitions since 1998 to coincide with the great earthquake of 1934 which flattened Kathmandu Valley and killed more than 10,000 people. But this year, organisers say, there was unprecedented interest on new building techniques and disaster preparedness.  

For archived material of Nepali Times of the past 20 years, site search: nepalitimes.com