'' on 12 March 2010 features the Pichilemu earthquakes and the swearing in of President Piñera The earthquakes were reported by local, national and international news media. Locally, online newspaper
Pichilemu News published an article named "First signs of change?: Shaken handover ceremony in Chile because of new earthquake aftershocks" ("¿Los primeros signos del cambio?: Movido cambio de mando se vivió en el país ante nuevas réplicas del terremoto") on 11 March; The only local radio that continued broadcasting through the day of the earthquakes was
Radio Entre Olas, directed by Jorge Nasser Guerra, who along with two other radio workers, reportedly were the only ones not to be evacuated after the earthquakes in Pichilemu. Because the earthquakes provoked a power outage, the radio worked with "emergency equipment". Previously, after the 27 February earthquake,
Entre Olas did not stop broadcasting either, despite there was a power outage that lasted for several days. Nationally distributed newspaper
El Mercurio published on its 12 March 2010 main page the headline "6.9 [magnitude] aftershock marks the most seismic day after the
earthquake" ("Réplica de 6,9° marca el día más sísmico post terremoto"), adding that "[s]eventeen of the twenty seisms that occurred yesterday [11 March] in central-southern Chile had their epicentre in
Pichilemu,
Region of O'Higgins, which was declared in Disaster State yesterday." On that same day,
Santiago-based newspaper
La Tercera published on their headline: "Piñera faces first crisis as he takes office as new President" ("Piñera enfrenta primera crisis al asumir como nuevo Presidente");
La Tercera elaborated: "The 6.9 Richter magnitude earthquake, which occurred minutes before the power handover took place, added an additional quota of drama to the oath of Sebastián Piñera, whose agenda was already modified by the 27 February disaster." Other newspapers of national distribution where the earthquake was reported on its main page included
Las Últimas Noticias (which featured a photograph of President Piñera aboarding a helicopter in military dress),
Publimetro, and
La Nación, whose main headline said "Emergency measures marked start of Piñera['s presidency]" ("Medidas de emergencia marcan partida de Piñera"). '' included a headline on their 12 March 2010 main page titled "For Chile, More Aftershocks and An Inauguration", featuring a photograph of presidents
Lugo and
Correa during one of the earthquakes Throughout Chile, regional newspapers also reported the earthquakes and tsunami warning on their edition of 12 March 2010. Among these are
La Estrella de Arica (
Arica),
La Estrella de Iquique (
Iquique),
El Mercurio de Antofagasta,
La Estrella del Norte (both from
Antofagasta),
El Mercurio de Calama,
La Estrella del Loa (both from
Calama),
El Diario de Atacama,
Diario Chañarcillo (both from
Copiapó),
El Día (
La Serena),
El Mercurio de Valparaíso,
La Estrella de Valparaíso (both from
Valparaíso),
El Líder (
San Antonio),
El Tipógrafo (
Rancagua),
La Prensa (
Curicó),
El Sur (
Concepción),
El Austral de Temuco (
Temuco),
El Diario Austral de Los Ríos (
Valdivia),
El Austral de Osorno (
Osorno),
El Llanquihue (
Puerto Montt), and
La Prensa Austral (
Punta Arenas). Among the international media who reported on the earthquakes were the
BBC,
Reuters, The newspaper published an extensive article titled "Aftershocks Jolt Chile as New President Is Sworn In", which stated that the earthquakes "almost overshadowed the inauguration of Chile’s first right-wing leader in 20 years [Piñera]." Other newspapers who included headlines on the earthquake on their 12 March 2010 main pages include
El Mundo,
El País,
ABC (the three from
Madrid,
Spain),
Clarín (
Buenos Aires,
Argentina),
Bild (
Berlin,
Germany),
El Colombiano (
Medellín,
Colombia),
El Tiempo (
Bogotá, Colombia),
The Dallas Morning News (
Dallas,
Texas, United States of America),
El Comercio (
Lima,
Peru), and
Excélsior (
Mexico City,
Mexico). ==See also==