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Rebuilding Chile could take years

DICHATO, Chile — Chile's president says it will take three years to rebuild the region wracked by an earthquake and tsunami, something all too clear to the people cleaning up this splintered tourist town.

Dichato is nestled between pine-forested hills and a lovely sheltered bay where colorful fishing boats served coastal communities and export companies. Its population of 4,000 triples each January and February with tourists — many were in town when disaster struck — and residents count on that brief summer vacation for much of their income.

The quake and tsunami killed at least 19 people in Dichato and smashed neat wooden houses and small hotels into huge splinter piles. The surge ruined most other buildings in town, which stank Thursday with decomposing fish. One fishing boat marooned far inland was full of rotting octopus.

President Michelle Bachelet said Thursday that she is confident "Chile will rise" from the devastation — but not as fast as some might want.

She said it could take at least three years to bring the region back.

Powerful aftershocks continued to rock the area. A magnitude-6.0 aftershock shook the quake-hit city of Concepcion early this morning, sending rattled residents running out of buildings in their underwear. Several hours later, a magnitude-6.6 shake — the strongest since Sunday — sent people fleeing into the streets yet again.

A resident of San Pedro, across the river from Concepcion, called into Radio Bio-Bio to report that a quake-damaged building had collapsed in the aftershock. Officials had not confirmed the report.

In Dichato, Bachelet's government had made a difference before the quake, building 130 neat mustard-yellow duplexes in a public housing project that just opened in September and providing 60 million pesos — $120,000 — to restore the facades of businesses along main street, said Mabel Gomez, president of the local chamber of commerce.

But as they rooted through the remains Thursday, Dichato's residents said they are pinning their hopes for renewal on the new president, conservative billionaire Sebastian Pinera, who takes office next week.

Pinera, who takes office March 11, named new governors for the six hardest-hit regions and told them to get to work even before his inauguration.

His immediate priorities: Find the missing; ensure law and order; restore utilities; and tend to the injured.

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