20 Nov 2024
Monday 30 December 2013 - 11:45
Story Code : 74653

Iran vows to restore glory of quake-hit Bam citadel

Iran vows to restore glory of quake-hit Bam citadel
TEHRAN, Dec 30 A senior Iranian official says the ancient citadel of Bam, destroyed by an earthquake a decade ago, will again be a major tourist attraction by 2016, media reported.
Over the next two or three years, Arge Bam will be rebuilt so it again becomes a major tourist attraction, Fars news agency quoted Mohammad Ali Najafi, head of Irans heritage organisation as saying.

Najafi visited the site on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the deadly earthquake, which reduced the citadel to rubble on December 26, 2003.

The 6.3 magnitude dawn quake killed 26,000-32,000 people, according to various estimates, and left 75,000 homeless.

Nearly 80 per cent of Bams infrastructure was damaged, and the desert citadel, once considered the worlds largest adobe building, crumbled.

Bam, 1,000 kilometres southeast of Tehran, received almost one million visitors a year before the disaster.

The citadel can be traced back to the sixth century BC but reached its apogee from the seventh to 11th centuries as it sat astride the Silk Road and other trade routes.

Najafi expressed satisfaction with the pace of the rebuilding work, saying that on average, some 80 per cent of the reconstruction of Arge Bam had been completed.

Hailing international aid to rebuild both the citadel and the city, Najafi said: Arge Bam is a symbol of international cooperation to revive a global monument.

He also praised the efforts of Bam residents in helping to reconstruct the citadel.

In addition to international aid, the government in Tehran also granted loans to survivors so they could rebuild their homes.

But Najafi admitted that many people were having problems repaying these mortgages, and pledged that the government would not abandon them, Mehr news agency reported.

The Bam quake was such a disaster that Iran agreed to open it up to international aid.

Tehran even allowed US planes loaded with humanitarian supplies to land on its soil for the first time since the two countries severed relations in 1980.

Iran straddles several seismic fault lines and has been hit by many earthquakes of various magnitude.

By The Malay Mail Online

 

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