November 11, 2012 –
MYANMAR– A 6.8magnitude earthquake struck a mountainous region near Mandalay, Myanmar
early Sunday morning. The earthquake had a depth of 9.8 km (6.1 miles) and
struck just 116 miles from Mandalay, Myanmar. The earthquake was downgraded by
the USGS from a 7.0 event. A strong earthquake struck northern Myanmar on
Sunday, with local media reporting that five people were killed. Scattered
damage and injuries also were reported in areas close to the quake’s epicenter..
Residents from Mandalay, the second biggest
commercial city in central Myanmar, told Reuters that they felt a very
strong tremor. “I’ve never felt such a strong tremor. I also heard some loud
noises and the light went out. No idea about the damage,” a resident
said. The earthquake was followed by
a strong series of aftershocks and low-level tsunami warnings went out for the
Indian Ocean. -TEP
Earthquake
creates panic: At least 13 people were killed and 40 taken to
hospital after a powerful earthquake struck central Myanmar on Sunday, Save the
Children said. The death toll from the 6.8-magnitude quake included four
labourers on a bridge and two people killed
in a monastery collapse in an area north of Mandalay, Myanmar’s second biggest
city, the aid group said in a report. It said a further six people were killed
in Sint Ku township in Sagaing region, while one died in Mandalay. “According to
the information we have so far, two people died and three were injured because
of the earthquake, while five are still missing,” the official in the capital
Naypyidaw told AFP, asking not to be named. He said the missing were workers
flung into the Irrawaddy river when the quake shook the bridge they were
building in an area north of Mandalay, the country’s second-largest city. One
man died and three were injured by buildings collapsing in a small town in
central Sagaing region. A woman was also killed by falling debris from a brick
wall in a village north of Mandalay. The shallow 6.8-magnitude quake hit around
116 kilometres (72 miles) north of Mandalay at a depth of just 10 kilometres,
the US Geological Survey (USGS) said. It initially put the magnitude of the
quake at 7.0. It was followed by a series of strong aftershocks. “I ran from my
bed carrying my daughter out to the street. There were many people in the road.
Some were shouting and others felt dizzy,” Mandalay resident San Yu Kyaw told
AFP by telephone. “People are now scared of more earthquakes. Especially those
who live or run businesses in high-rise buildings are desperate and don’t know
what to do,” he said. Construction standards are generally poor in the country
formerly known as Burma, one of Asia’s most impoverished nations. A large crack
stretching from the second to the sixth floor of Mandalay’s highest building,
the 25-storey Mann Myanmar Plaza, appeared after the quake, a local resident
told AFP. He said people were afraid to
enter the structure and it remains closed. The USGS issued a yellow alert,
saying “some casualties and damage are possible” but that the impact should be
relatively localized. The quake hit at 7:42 am (0112 GMT) and was followed by two shallow 5.0-magnitude aftershocks within
20 minutes, according to the USGS. “The quake was quite strong. I was shopping
in the market at the time and I saw women crying in fear when they felt it. We
expect more quakes are coming. Everybody is afraid,” said 23-year-old Win Win
Nwe, a resident in the small town of Shwebo, north of Mandalay. She said there
were fears that several people had been injured in a nearby town. It comes
little more than a week before US President
Barack Obama is due in Myanmar on a historic visit, as the West begins to roll
back sanctions to reward a series of dramatic political reforms under President
Thein Sein. The quake was felt in neighboring Thailand, including in the capital Bangkok, according to reports on
social media websites. It struck around 572 kilometers east of the Bangladeshi
capital of Dhaka, one of the world’s biggest cities. Earthquakes are relatively
common in Myanmar. The USGS said six strong earthquakes, of 7.0-magnitude and
more, struck between 1930 and 1956 near the Sagaing Fault, which runs north to
south through the centre of the country, resulting in landslides, liquefaction
and the loss of 610 lives. Kyaw Kyaw Lwin, an official at the National
Earthquake Information Division in the capital Naypyidaw, said it was the
strongest quake in the area since a 6.0-magnitude quake in 1991. –Khaleej
Times
for the coastal region of Chile. People in
high-risk areas should remain alert for the potential occurrence of seismic
events.