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Transcript: The Earthquake In Armenia

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  • Transcript: The Earthquake In Armenia

    THE EARTHQUAKE IN ARMENIA

    ABC News
    SHOW: TIME TUNNEL 9:00 AM EST ABC
    December 8, 2006 Friday

    Anchors: Rob Simmelkjaer

    GRAPHICS: TIME TUNNEL

    ROB SIMMELKJAER (ABC NEWS)

    (Off-camera) Hi, there. And welcome to 'Time Tunnel," where we take
    a look with what was making news in the past.

    GRAPHICS: TRAVEL BACK TO THIS DAY IN TIME

    ROB SIMMELKJAER (ABC NEWS)

    (Off-camera) I'm Rob Simmelkjaer in New York. Today, we travel back
    to this day in 1988, where a massive earthquake rocked the Soviet
    Republic of Armenia. Here's Peter Jennings with the news of the day.

    GRAPHICS: 8 DECEMBER 1988

    GRAPHICS: WORLD NEWS TONIGHT

    ANNOUNCER

    >>From ABC, this is 'World News Tonight" with Peter Jennings.

    PETER JENNINGS (ABC NEWS)

    (Off-camera) Good evening. The disaster that summoned the Soviet, it
    is so urgently home, began at 11:41 in the morning yesterday. Folks
    were at work. The kids were in school. The earthquake was measured
    at seven on the Richter scale. And that is an earthquake capable of
    doing massive damage. And that seems to be the case.

    PETER JENNINGS (ABC NEWS)

    (Voiceover) The Soviet Republic of Armenia, which is roughly the size
    of Maryland, is about 1500 miles south of Moscow, right on the border
    with both Turkey and Iran. Based on what the International Red Cross
    knows, they believed that 30,000 people may have lost their lives,
    maybe more.

    PETER JENNINGS (ABC NEWS)

    (Off-camera) But maybe 300,000 are homeless, maybe more. Our first
    report from the Soviet Union is the actual report that Soviet
    television viewers saw on their evening news. The English voice is
    our interpreter.

    SOVIET REPORTER (MALE)

    (Through translator) These are the ruins of Leninakan. In the central
    square of the town, the clock shows the exact time disaster struck.

    The second largest city in Armenia is in ruins. We saw houses turned
    into heaps of metal and a concrete. Schools and kindergartens turned
    into heaps of rubble. We saw people, their faces full of grief
    and anguish. A tragedy they cannot express in words. According to
    preliminary estimates, the earthquake of unprecedented strength
    destroyed two-thirds of the city Leninakan. The city of Spitak,
    70 kilometers away with a population of more than 20,000, has been
    practically wiped from the face of the earth.

    SOVIET REPORTER (MALE)

    (Through translator) Overall, in the disaster-stricken area, hundreds
    of thousands of people were made homeless. And tens of thousands lost
    their lives. Today, the central committee of the Armenian Communist
    Party, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet and the Council of Ministers
    of the Republic approved a message to the people of Armenia. Its words
    were imbued with a deep feeling of grief and sorrow for the bereaved
    families. It expressed faith in the spirit, courage and endurance of
    the Armenian people. It declared the 9th and 10th of December to be
    days of national mourning.

    SOVIET REPORTER (MALE)

    (Through translator) The whole country is coming to the aid of the
    victims. All the Soviet Republics. And let us hope that the cities,
    which rise from the ruins, will serve as a memorial to the victims
    of this natural disaster. Today, Nikolai Ryzhkov, the chairman of
    the commission set up by the Politburo of the Communist Party of the
    Soviet Union and chairman of the Council of Ministers, arrived in
    Yerevan, accompanied by members of the commission including Minister
    of Defense Yazov. After a meeting at the Central Committee of the
    Armenian Communist Party, members of the commission went to the scene
    of the disaster and started work.

    PRIME MINISTER NIKOLAI RYZHKOV (SOVIET REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA)

    (Through translator) Tonight, we will be taking a decision to mobilize
    all equipment that can possibly be of use, not only from the army,
    but also from factories, and not only from Armenia, but from other
    republics, and from all sectors of the economy. We need mobile cranes
    with lifting power of up to 40 tons. We need gas specialist with their
    equipment. And everything has to be organized in shifts, because the
    work is going on around the clock. I would like to make an appeal to
    all factory managers working its party organizations.

    Don't wait for a formal decision to be taken. Today, right away,
    start loading the equipment I mentioned, plus earth moving machines,
    and send them here to Armenia.

    PETER JENNINGS (ABC NEWS)

    (Off-camera) As the Soviet sought, and heard it on television this
    evening. And incidentally for them and for us, simply light-year
    sooner than we would have seen such reporting before Mr. Gorbachev.
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