Darkest Day

Darkest Day As New Zealand begins the long recovery from its deadly earthquake, this report goes on to the rubble-lined streets to get the personal accounts of what has been described as the country's 'darkest day'.

"I can't see it getting back on its feet for a long, long time". These are the words of reporter David Brill, who witnessed first-hand the devastation within the city. Travelling through the streets of Christchurch, the buildings either side of the road lie in heaps of rubble. Gaping holes have opened up in the middle of the road. One car's roof has been crushed by a giant steel girder. Those who survived the disaster are thankful. "We weren't here and we were damn lucky," John Sellwood says as he shows us around his house, which is filled with mortar, fallen beams and broken crockery. Despite the extreme damage wreaked by the earthquake, the people of New Zealand are pulling together to get over the disaster: "I'm really proud of how the community has come together". But it will be a long and arduous rebuilding process, and Christchurch will be uninhabitable until the process is well under-way. Many of the buildings now appear to be beyond repair and will have to be pulled down. Most maintain they will stay and help rebuild the city, but as the weeks go on it's dubious how possible that will be.
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