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- THE WEEK, Page 14WORLDA Calamitous Plague On All Our Houses
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- Nicaragua's lethal tsunamis are the latest disaster to hit the
- planet
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- "Natural" is not a word that links logically with "disaster."
- But together the words emphasize how little control humans have
- over the events they describe. Almost without pause, nature
- lately has shattered, crushed and flooded the earth with a
- series of cataclysms that have killed hundreds, caused
- incalculable damage and left survivors shaken.
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- On the same day in mid-August, a volcano erupted in
- Alaska, an earthquake hit near Alaska's Andreanof Islands and
- another rocked Kyrgyzstan in the former Soviet Union. Two weeks
- ago, Hurricane Andrew hit the Bahamas, then ripped through
- Florida and Louisiana. Last week the chain of disasters
- continued. Tropical Storm Polly drenched eastern China and
- killed at least 150 people. Typhoon Omar, which had earlier
- raked Guam, headed for the Philippines. In Afghanistan flash
- floods swept through the valleys of the Hindu Kush, leaving
- hundreds dead or missing.
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- Probably the most spectacular of the week's calamities
- began with a major earthquake under the Pacific Ocean 30 miles
- off the west coast of Nicaragua. The temblor spawned tsunamis,
- commonly known as tidal waves, that towered as high as 45 ft. in
- spots and rolled over dozens of small towns along 200 miles of
- coast. Surging inland, the waves crushed houses and hotels and
- swept people out to sea. Nicaraguan civil defense officials said
- 116 were killed and 150 missing.
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- Managua called urgently for international assistance, and
- several countries, including the U.S., responded with money and
- supplies. President Violetta Chamorro also asked Washington to
- resume its assistance program, which was abruptly cut off last
- spring to underline U.S. displeasure over the continuing
- political influence of leftist Sandinistas.
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