This weekend I was down in the province of Chincha, three hours by road south of Lima. I was asked by a group unaffiliated with my organisation to help out with a census the government has been conducting in the last week in the three provinces of Chincha, Pisco and Ica. Several of my new Peruvian friends are members of the Movimiento de Vida Cristiana which at the government's behest mobilised 650 volunteers in the space of a few days to spend the whole weekend, from very early on Saturday to late on Sunday, in Chincha and go house to house, filling out one questionnaire per household on the status of the occupants and their dwellings.
Not one of the households which my partner and I censused, approaching 50 in number with perhaps an average of 6 inhabitants each, had suffered much more than a few scrapes. Despite the fact that in my estimation fully a third of the houses were razed to the ground and heading towards four fifths would have experienced flying debris of the very heavy variety during the quake or subsequent tremors. An aerial shot of the surrounds, though impossible due to lack of a helicopter, would have shown that despite the mercifully low number of deaths, the scale of the tragedy is yet mammoth and urgent. How more people were not seriously injured or worse I don't know.
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