TERRA.WIRE
After Bam quake, Iran's leadership to consider shifting capital
TEHRAN (AFP) Jan 05, 2004
Iran's top national security body will this week "seriously" examine proposals to shift the Islamic republic's political capital out of quake-prone Tehran following the devasting earthquake in the southeast of the country, state television reported Monday.

Hassan Rowhani, a top cleric who heads the Supreme National Security Council, said the body would Saturday "seriously study the problem of moving the capital."

"The capital must be moved," he told national television, adding the proposal had been floating around since 1991 but had since failed to gain any momentum and the full cooperation of all government bodies.

On December 26, Iran's southeastern city of Bam was flattened by a quake measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale. At least 30,000 people were killed, with around 80 percent of the city destroyed.

Tehran, which sprawls over 1,600 square kilometers (640 square miles) and is home to some 12 million people, straddles three major fault lines.

Experts say a major earthquake can be expected here every 150 years. The last one occurred around 1830.

Under normal circumstances, Tehran's plethora of narrow streets are some of the most clogged in the world. Traffic jams can leave people stranded for hours, and experts fear that if a massive quake hits it would be almost impossible for emergency teams to reach the victims.

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