Poor areas suffered 3.5 times more damage in Turkey’s earthquake
In satellite images, around 5% of buildings showed signs of damage
Victims are still being counted, but the earthquakes in Turkey on February 6th already rank as the world’s deadliest natural disaster since 2010. Although any quake of such strength would inflict grave harm, flimsy houses exacerbated their impact.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Graphic detail section of the print edition under the headline “The rich are different”
Chart sources: Endeksa; ESA; Microsoft Open Buildings; Ollie Ballinger; OpenStreetMap; Peter Bird; The Economist
More from Graphic detail
What New York’s congestion charge could teach the rest of America
Lighter traffic in some parts of the city is a promising start. Will it continue?
The secret to one of Europe’s best-performing stockmarkets
Its economy is mired in gloom, but its stock exchange is the envy of Europe
Drones spotted on America’s east coast highlight a bigger problem
Unidentified objects can be dangerous, but not in the ways you might think
What to expect after Germany’s confidence vote
Much like voters in the rest of the world, Germans are fed up with their government