Earthquake – NZ Defence Force – Update 10
Media Advisory
Monday 28 February 2011
Christchurch Earthquake – NZ Defence Force –
Update 10
• AIR FORCE FREIGHT OVER HALF A
MILLION KILOS
• CANTERBURY TO ARRIVE BACK IN
LYTTELTON AROUND 6PM
• ARMY ENGINEERS HEAD
INTO SUBURBS
• NZ DEFENCE
FORCE PERSONNEL IN TIMOR-LESTE HOLD CHURCH
SERVICE
The total freight facilitated by the Royal
New Zealand Air Force into Christchurch since the start of
the operation has now reached 601,000kg, with 130,000kg
moved in the last 24 hours.
150 aircrew and support
personnel remain committed to the RNZAF effort in the city
and 370 passengers have been moved from Christchurch in last
24 hours.
Air Force Iroquois helicopters are also set to
undertake food distribution tasks.
HMNZS CANTERBURY,
the Royal New Zealand Navy’s Multirole Vessel is making
good time as she heads back to Lyttelton. She is full
with:
• a fuel tanker (belonging to Chevron Mobil)
• four Telecom vans
• four pallets of Telecom
equipment
• 20 DoC 4WD vehicles
• five Housing
New Zealand 4WD vehicles
• two pallets of water
• two containers of bedding (Department of
Corrections)
• medical backpacks (Ministry of
Education)
• Army equipment including two Unimog
trucks, a truck tractor and 12 Bailey bridges
• four
refrigerated containers
• three diesel generators.
CANTERBURY is expected around 6pm at this stage,
although THIS TIME MAY CHANGE and her ETA will be
updated.
Non-armed security patrols have continued in
Lyttelton Town centre with HMNZS PUKAKI, OTAGO and PEGASUS
personnel contributing. Personnel from all three units have
also been securing/boarding up shop windows and providing
similar DIY assistance.
1,113 NZ Army personnel remain committed with 129 Singapore Army (SAF) personnel to providing the 24/7 cordon around the city and also in the suburbs of Bexley and Waltham.
NZ Army engineers have moved out to Sumner this morning to assist with tasks in this area and 80 soldiers from the four North Island Territorial units have joined the 164 South Island Territorial soldiers to assist with tasks around the city.
Army engineers are continuing to operate a water production unit in New Brighton, in addition to delivering packaged water from Burnham Military Camp.
Army catering teams are continuing to produce 1900 breakfasts, 2200 lunches and dinners and 350 midnight meals per day. Three Environmental Health teams continue to work with the Ministry of Health.
NZ Defence Force personnel serving in Timor-Leste reflected on the tragedy in their church service yesterday, attended also by personnel from the Australian-led International Stabilization Force (ISF).
”We remember the thousands of people who are desperately trying to cope physically and emotionally with the disaster at home in Christchurch … We too are grieving and trying to cope with the magnitude of the disaster in our own country and in many cases our own city.
“All of this when we are so far away and wishing we were able to be home to help the people of Christchurch, and to comfort loved ones … We still have a job here to do. It is the nature of New Zealand to help others, and of our Defence and Police Forces to put our duty before our own personal needs. Timor still requires our presence here, as do the other nations our services people are currently in.
“There are some very tough times ahead for us
all. But Christchurch will eventually rebuild and New
Zealand will remain a proud and good member of the
international community. NZDF and Police will continue to
serve our nation both at home and abroad and we will
continue, here in Timor, to serve for the good of others and
to fly our nation’s flag proudly,” says Major Ian
Lattimore, Officer Commanding NZ National Command Element in
Timor-Leste.
ENDS