Connect with us

Global Issues

Venezuela Was Not Simply Struck By An Earthquake. It Was Exposed -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

What Venezuela shuts your eyes so pure and plain is that disaster risk is not only environmental. It is constitutional. This is about whether a state honors even the most minimal duty it has: to protect life. Disasters become designed mass casualty events, not a matter of unfortunate happenstance when that obligation starts to look like just an option.

Published

on

Delcy Rodriguez - Venezuela

As the two powerful quakes, a 7.2 out near San Felipe, followed just 39 seconds later by an even bigger 7.5 coming very close to Morón, tore through this nation, the attention turned to the unusualness of such a “doublet earthquake.” But the true tale is far less geological and far more political: this wasn’t merely an act of God. An artificially induced disaster, if you will, awaiting its trigger.

The science is straightforward. Venezuela lies within the slow, but unstoppable, grinding plate boundary between the Caribbean Plate and South American Plate that slowly moves each year (more or less 2 centimeters)y. This is not the catastrophic violence of the Pacific Ring of Fire and it is subtler, quieter and therefore more deadly. Slow tectonics breed complacency. Complacency breeds collapse. And collapse is precisely what would ensue.

One had collapsed a 22-story tower in Caracas. Whole neighbourhoods of La Guaira now a disaster zone were flattened. Forces from the state police are said to have destroyed critical infrastructure, including Simón Bolívar International Airport. Roads cracked, supply chains halted, and thousands tens of thousands perhaps—are missing thought to be buried beneath the earth. However earthquakes do not kill people. Systems do.

The quake was a doublet and this only honed the savagery. What broke structures in the wake of the first shock finished them off in reaction to the second. This is no freak event , it is a known geological threat. Modern engineering anticipates sequential shocks. Resilient legal systems enforce codes for building in this manner. Functional states plan for this very upset of cascading failure. Venezuela did not.

That failure is not accidental. It is structural. It is legal. It is political. Venezuela has long been an such a state, essentially operating as a hollowed-out regulatory state where laws exist more as symbols of governance than escrupulously-observed safeguards. The application of building codes, when they exist at all, is spotty. Oversight mechanisms are compromised. Shortcuts, getting around the rules, and informal construction have flourished as an incentive in economic crisis. In such a climate, infrastructure is not designed to endure disaster, it is designed to survive inspection. Until reality intervenes.

Advertisement

The result is what we have now: a disaster that defies explanation based on the magnitude alone. There have been other countries where stronger tremors resulted in less human casualties. It’s not below ground, but above it in governance, accountability and the rule of law.

International response is already on its way. European, American, Chinese and other Latin American rescue teams are racing with time to pull mani from concrete graves. Humanitarian aid will flow. Statements of solidarity will multiply.

Yet none of this deals with the actual, uncomfortable reality: international aid is after domestic failure.

What Venezuela shuts your eyes so pure and plain is that disaster risk is not only environmental. It is constitutional. This is about whether a state honors even the most minimal duty it has: to protect life. Disasters become designed mass casualty events, not a matter of unfortunate happenstance when that obligation starts to look like just an option.

Its rare seismic mechanics will be studied, which includes the “doublet earthquake” that occurs there. As such it should be studied as a compounded failure: nature amplified by institutional weakness. Not tectonic, because the most incendiary fault line in Venezuela is not soil. It is political.

Advertisement

Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August Surabaya, Managing Partner of Law Firm Victorious Indonesia and Stuctural Engineering Expertize

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Cultural diversity in Nigerian schools - youths in university Cultural diversity in Nigerian schools - youths in university
Forgotten Dairies5 hours ago

Breaking the Script: How the World Is Rewriting Gender Stereotypes in 2026 -By Happiness Yohanna

In 2026, the story is clear: humanity is editing its script together. We are keeping what works responsibility, empathy, ambition...

Forgotten Dairies10 hours ago

Xenophobia Is Un-African: South Africa Must Not Betray Africa’s Shared Destiny -By Isaac Asabor

The continent's future depends not on walls but on bridges, not on hatred but on humanity, not on suspicion but...

Forgotten Dairies10 hours ago

Cautionary Tale of Afolabi-Brown’s Heartbreak in Harvesters Church -By Ugochukwu Ugwuanyi

Meanwhile, it must be emphasised that disconnecting from your pastor for reasons other than divine instruction puts one at cross purposes...

Crime Rate and gunmen Crime Rate and gunmen
Forgotten Dairies10 hours ago

Nigeria At The Crossroads: Bandits, Ballots, Betrayal And Bad governance -By Onovughakpor Europeans

When state institutions are hollowed out by corruption, they become fundamentally incapable of responding to systemic emergencies. This institutional decay...

Arms Proliferation - Fulani herdsmen Arms Proliferation - Fulani herdsmen
National Issues11 hours ago

Insecurity in Nigeria: A Deep Look at Current Challenges, Root Causes, and the Way Forward -By Alfred Esther Oghenebrume

When crime is no longer profitable and the system of paying ransoms is replaced by swift, strict judicial prosecution, the...

Bamidele Williams Bamidele Williams
Forgotten Dairies11 hours ago

President Tinubu: On Your Mandate, We Shall Fry -By Bamidele Williams

A nation of over 200 million people, rich in talent, resources, and youthful energy, deserves leadership that speaks the language...

Polygamy and Christianity Polygamy and Christianity
Opinion11 hours ago

The Polygamy Excuse -By Okolie Kosisochukwu Esther

What's more important is how we treat each other in relationships. Trust, commitment, and communication are key. While understanding potential...

Seriake Dickson Seriake Dickson
Breaking News16 hours ago

Court Did Not Deregister NDC, Says Seriake Dickson

The NDC national leader says the party will challenge the court judgment at the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court...

Breaking News16 hours ago

NDC Leaders Dickson, Kwankwaso Unite Over Court Ruling, Democracy Fight

Dickson and Kwankwaso have reaffirmed their commitment to defending Nigeria’s multi-party democracy amid the NDC legal dispute.

Peter Obi and Kwankwaso Peter Obi and Kwankwaso
Breaking News16 hours ago

Court Releases Full Judgment Setting Aside NDC Registration

A Federal High Court in Lokoja has nullified the judgment that ordered INEC to register the Nigeria Democratic Congress as...