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In Morocco, the violence of the earthquake still “haunts” the survivors of the High Atlas

“I can still hear my grandson’s screams under the rubble.” A year after the powerful earthquake that struck southern Morocco, Kebira Aït Bellaïd is struggling to come to terms with the loss of her daughter and three grandchildren. “This earthquake changed me forever,” the 52-year-old woman, who still lives in a tent like most residents of Tiniskt, perched in the mountains 70 kilometers southwest of Marrakech, told AFP. This picturesque village, with its earthen buildings built in layers one above the other, was almost wiped out by the earthquake of September 8, 2023, which killed nearly 3,000 people and damaged around 60,000 homes in the High Atlas. The trauma caused by this natural disaster, which claimed the lives of 45 people in Tiniskt, remains acute in this remote and difficult-to-access village of 500 inhabitants. Kebira Aït Bellaïd is trying to move forward for her husband and children. children “still alive”. But hearing “Rayan, 9 years old, who implores me under the rubble still haunts me”, recounts with emotion this woman followed since by a psychiatrist. Her neighbor Khadija Id Yassine hopes, with misty eyes, “never to think again about this nightmarish night although it remains anchored in (her) memory”. “Life is hard in the tent between the freezing cold of winter and the stifling heat of summer”, continues this mother of three children who has not yet been able to rebuild her house due to non-conformity of her land. – “Turn this painful page” – While the majority of families in Tiniskt have received an initial tranche of public aid (20,000 dirhams, or 1,845 euros), only about ten reconstruction projects have recently been launched. A slowness explained by the difficulty of access to certain areas to carry out demolitions and clearing of rubble, indicates Amine Bouih, in charge of the province of Al-Haouz on which Tiniskt depends, within the public agency Al Omrane. In this area, the most affected by the earthquake, 24,000 buildings should be rebuilt. To date, 1,000 have been built, more than 9,000 foundations laid and approximately 5,000 structures constructed, according to Mr. Bouih. In Ouirgane, a village on the edge of a national road 14 kilometers northeast of Tiniskt, the pace is faster: two houses are inhabited, others are being built or completed. All built in concrete but with the obligation to make the facade coverings in earth. Brahim Aït Ouarah is one of the lucky ones to have left the disaster camp in March to move into his new home, built at his own expense before receiving public aid. “The six months I spent in a tent were very difficult, I was eager to turn this painful page even if nothing can compensate for the lives lost,” says this ambulance driver who lost his wife and a child in the earthquake. – The choice of concrete – In Tiniskt and other villages, the choice of reconstruction also fell on concrete, going against the recommendations of architects who advocated traditional construction in earth and stone. “Concrete was imposed because people have preconceived ideas about traditional techniques, but that could have changed with awareness-raising,” regrets Yassine Aït Si Mhanned, a young man from Tiniskt. For Mr. Bouih of the Al Omrane agency, traditional architecture presents “difficulties in the realization and in the duration of construction. It is more expensive in certain areas given the need for a qualified and very rare workforce.” Architect Khalil Morad El Ghilali warns: “the introduction of concrete in these regions is a big mistake because it is expensive, it is not adapted to this environment and not reliable.” According to him, “there was a lot of pressure from the inhabitants, the watchword is to satisfy them, which is not the right approach.” This professional is working on the reconstruction of 70 houses in earth or stone, after having discarded 280 projects based on concrete. “The urgency of the reconstruction has led to haste with a lack of vision around local construction cultures and administrative blockages,” he deplores.kao/cgo/fka/anr

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