[serious mode]
As horrible as this is (I really can't comprehend the scale: 150K+ bodies [somebody said twice our local population] 5 million homeless etc... I'm surprised nobody has mentioned the whys and wherefores of it all? I mean the complete failure of the human and technical systems involved. A 'rich picture' might look something like: -
'Impoverished' countries unable to justify huge capital expenditure on state-of-the-art equipment as per that installed in the Pacific Ocean, where Tsunami risks are much higher.
People in charge of what equipment there was, frustrated at the fact it wasn't working properly. The reason being that the spares requests were lost inside government, being bounced around from department to department.
Allegedly, the American seismologists picked up warnings but did nothing, partly because they couldn't confirm scale or direction and partly because they didn't know who to contact?
Thai meteorologists, working on a hunch, contacted local radio to warn of possible repercussions as a result of the original shock, but this wasn't disseminated widely as the Thai government were worried about scaring/upsetting tourists
After the first wave struck in the Phuket region (1.5hrs), some local Thai officials tried to tell Sri Lanka and India (4hrs)of the approaching danger, but passed the information to the wrong departments, who took no heed of the warning.
As the scapegoats of inactivity are hunted-down, I'm thinking how much might actually be learnt from this catastrophe?
Apparently the risk from Cumbre Vieja is extremely acute and its effects ten-fold more dangerous than the Asian tsunami? One can't help but wonder, how might the USA, Africa, S.E UK etc... deal differently before, during and after such a devastating wave of destruction?
Probably not the time right?
[/serious mode]