Series of earthquakes triggers emergency conference ‎on disaster readiness ‎

The series of earthquakes that has rattled northern ‎Israel over the past week has prompted the Defense ‎Ministry to summon an emergency conference on ‎disaster readiness.‎

The meeting, scheduled for Wednesday, will include ‎officials from the Defense, Interior and Public ‎Security ministries, the Homefront Command, Israel ‎Police, Magen David Adom emergency services, Fire ‎and Rescue Services and the National Emergency ‎Management Administration, as well as mayors nationwide. ‎

The Geophysical Institute of Israel said that while ‎‎Israelis felt about a dozen quakes, over 50 ‎tremors have been recorded in the past week, ranging ‎from 2.1 to 4.5 in magnitude. ‎

Zionist Union MK Amir Peretz, who heads the Knesset's Subcommittee for ‎Homefront Emergency Readiness, has called a meeting ‎of the forum for Thursday.‎

Security and emergency services officials are ‎expected to brief committee members on extreme-case ‎scenarios for Israel in the event of a major ‎earthquake. ‎

Modern-day Israel lies on the western side of the ‎Great Rift Valley, a divergent boundary between two ‎major tectonic plates. At least two massive ‎earthquakes have hit this fault system: the 1837 Galilee ‎earthquake, which experts believe measured 6.5 on ‎the Richter scale or higher, and which wreaked havoc ‎on the northern city of Safed and the surrounding ‎area, killing thousands of people; and the 1927 ‎Jericho earthquake, believed to have been a ‎6.2-magnitude tremor, which inflicted massive damage ‎on the Jerusalem and Jericho areas and killed 287 ‎people.‎

Multiple state comptrollers have warned that Israel ‎is ill-equipped to deal with a major earthquake. ‎

In 2015, State Comptroller Yosef Shapira warned that ‎Israel's failures in this arena were severe, saying ‎that according to emergency officials' assessments, ‎if a 7.5-magnitude tremor were to hit northern ‎Israel, its effects would be felt nationwide. ‎

The extreme-case scenario will see this quake kill ‎‎16,000 Israelis; over 6,000 would be wounded; 10,000 ‎buildings would collapse, 20,000 others would ‎sustain serious damage, and over 100,000 ‎buildings would sustain minor to moderate ‎damage, resulting in the temporary or permanent ‎displacement of 377,000 people.‎

A tremor of this kind would also destroy a significant ‎part of Israel's road infrastructure, as it would ‎cause at least 72 bridges and dozens of major highway ‎interchanges to collapse.‎

‎"There is no way for us to prevent earthquakes but ‎the homefront can prepare for them and that is the ‎government's responsibility," Peretz said.‎
‎"A national emergency plan must be prepared and ‎implemented by the state before a deadly earthquake ‎hits us."‎

Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman rejected ‎criticism over the issue, saying, "In June 2017, the ‎Defense Ministry led the biggest earthquake drill ‎ever held in Israel. In January 2018 we released the ‎findings of that drill and the Homefront Command ‎subsequently formulated a five-year plan to improve ‎civilian readiness for earthquakes.‎

‎"The ball is in the National Security Council's ‎court. They have to call a cabinet meeting on the ‎matter. I hope such a meeting is called and we made ‎the necessary decisions soon." ‎