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2,000 feared dead after Indonesia
quake
Banda Aceh -
Survivors of the Boxing Day tsunami fled their homes last night
after a huge undersea earthquake measuring up to 8.7 magnitude struck
off the coast of Sumatra, with as many as 2,000 people feared dead on
the Indonesian island of Nias, close to its epicentre.
Ninety-three days after giant waves
left nearly 300,000 people dead or missing, Indonesian vice-president
Jusuf Kalla told a local radio station that between 1,000 and 2,000
people were probably killed on Nias after the earthquake.
He said the estimate was based on an
assessment of damage to buildings, not bodies counted.
Agus
Mendrofa, deputy district head on Nias, off the western coast of
Sumatra, earlier told local radio 296 people had died. He added that
hundreds of buildings had been damaged or had collapsed.
Sergeant Zulkifli Sirait of the
island's police told AP: "We still cannot count the number of
casualties or the number of collapsed buildings because it is dark
here. It is possible that hundreds of people trapped in the collapsed
buildings died."
The Misna missionary news agency in
Rome reported that a huge fire was raging in Gu nungsitoli, the
island's main town. "From the window I see very high flames," it
quoted Father Raymond Laia as saying by telephone. "The town is
completely destroyed."
The town was likely to be 75%
damaged, local police said, after the earthquake struck on the same
faultline as the Boxing Day quake, 250 miles south-east of Banda Aceh.
Altogether, at least 340 Nias residents died and 10,000 were left
homeless in the December 26 earthquake.
With a tsunami warning system for the
Indian Ocean still the subject of political debate, governments in
Thailand, India and Japan tried to warn residents through the radio
and television after the earthquake struck 19 miles under the Andaman
Sea at 11.09pm local time.
Last night, the threat of a tsunami
appeared to recede, with the Thai, Sri Lankan and Indian governments
cancelling their tsunami alerts. But in Australia officials warned a
tsunami could hit the western coast.
In the Indonesian province of Aceh,
tens of thousands of people abandoned tents and temporary homes and
ran for high ground in darkness when the earth shook for two minutes,
far longer than the much smaller quakes in recent weeks.
Electricity and phone lines were down
across much of Sumatra as the earthquake was felt as far away as
Bangkok and Singapore, where tall buildings swayed and people in
high-rise hotels streamed on to the streets.
Recorded at 8.7 by the US Geological
Survey and 8.5 by Japan's Meteorologic Agency, with an epicentre
further south than the Boxing Day earthquake, seismologists warned the
latest earthquake had the potential to create another destructive
tsunami at the end of a week of at least seven smaller aftershocks in
the region.
Residents in the Sumatran city of
Medan said they felt the tremors were stronger than on December 26.
In Thailand, cracks in buildings
appeared, apparently caused by the quake, and people were evacuated
from hotels and hospitals in Phuket, Phang-nga and Krabi.
Warnings were issued over the radio
by officials charged with setting up a tsunami warning system in the
country.
"About 3,000 to 4,000 tourists and
locals have been evacuated from Patong and Kamala beaches to higher
places," Wichai Buapradit, deputy governor of Phuket, told Reuters.
"We've told them to take their valuable belongings and to go to higher
places."
Sirens sounded in Sri Lanka as towns
on the east coast began frantically evacuating residents. Local media
reported people had fled inland well in advance of any official
government warnings. Scientists last week predicted a magnitude 7.5
earthquake was possible in the region after the seismic slip on
December 26 had piled dangerous levels of stress on to two vulnerable
parts of the fault zone off the coast of Sumatra.
"There's been seismic activity
throughout this zone that has been ongoing for the last three months,"
Dale Grant of the US Geological Survey told the BBC. "This is an
aftershock of the great quake which is something we see as the earth
tries to settle itself."
But Mr Grant said he would not expect
potential tsunami wave heights to be "anywhere near as large" as those
that pounded coastlines on Boxing Day because the quake was less
strong. The December 26 event measured 9 magnitude and left 1.5
million homeless across 11 countries. The British Geological Survey
said yesterday's earthquake "occurred close to the epicentre of the
Boxing Day quake".
"It could be described as the largest
aftershock of this event," said senior seismologist David Booth. He
said there was a high probability of a tsunami occurring "but because
the earthquake is of such a shallow depth and is offshore, it would be
on a much smaller scale than the Boxing Day disaster".
India said it had issued a tsunami
warning as a precaution and put troops on alert along its coastline,
but said it had no evidence or reports of any deadly waves.
In the Indian-controlled Andaman and
Nicobar Islands, which have been rocked by 100 aftershocks since the
December tsunami, local authorities issued a tsunami warning asking
local people to vacate the coast. Scientists at Hyderabad's National
Geophysical Research Institute interviewed on Indian television warned
that if a tsunami was to be generated there was a three-hour window
before the coast would be hit.
On Sunday, a quake measuring 6.4 came
40 minutes after midnight local time in Indonesia's eastern province
of Maluku. A second aftershock, measuring 6.0 came seven hours later.
On Friday, a 5.9 quake hit near Banda Aceh.
Despite panic and evacuations, there
was also complacency on the streets of the devastated areas that have
become weary of aftershocks. With no sign of a tsunami two hours after
the tremors, many Indonesians roused from sleep returned to their
beds. -- Guardian News
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