Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

2 dead, 100 hurt in magnitude-6.3 earthquake near major Turkish and Greek tourist stops

WATCH ABOVE: Travellers in Greece sleep on pool lounge chairs following earthquake – Jul 21, 2017

A powerful earthquake killed at least two people and injured scores when it struck near major Turkish and Greek tourist destinations in the Aegean Sea early on Friday, officials said.

Story continues below advertisement

Local officials said 100 people were injured on the Greek holiday island of Kos, a destination favored by British holidaymakers. The identity of the victims was not immediately known.

WATCH: One dead after strong quake on Greek island village

Turkey’s disaster and emergency management authority, AFAD, said the earthquake had a magnitude of 6.3, with its epicenter 11 km (7 miles) from the nearest settlement, the village of Camlik. Other reports put the quake magnitude at 6.7.

Story continues below advertisement

Across a narrow Aegean Sea waterway in Turkey’s Bodrum, about 70 people were admitted to hospital, with injuries suffered in their attempts to flee the overnight tremor, which struck at 1.31 a.m. (2230 GMT).

It was the second quake of magnitude exceeding 6.0 in the broader region this year, a level that can cause considerable damage.

A hospital official said 100 people were injured, most slightly.

WATCH: 2 killed by earthquake in Greece, Turkey

Greek authorities sent helicopters to airlift the injured, said Yiorgos Hadjimarkou, the head of the South Aegean region.

Story continues below advertisement

“Our primary concern right now is (safeguarding) human life,” he told Greek state broadcaster ERT.

The Greek coast guard said damage was reported to the port of Kos, which is near a tourist strip of cafes and bars.

A ferry was unable to dock because of extensive damage. Private broadcaster SKAI showed images of a damaged quay, with wide cracks in the asphalt.

Police sources said the roof of a bar in Kos collapsed, but damage was almost exclusively confined to older buildings.

The quake could cause a small tsunami, the European quake agency EMSC said, but Turkish broadcasters cited officials saying large waves were more likely.

Several stores were damaged in Bodrum’s Gumbet district by rising sea levels, store owners told broadcaster NTV.

Story continues below advertisement

The Kostoday.com website showed images of rising sea levels and parts of the flooded tourist strip, with large chunks of rubble elsewhere. One picture showed a small fishing boat on a road. The tidal wave was about 70 cm (28 inches) high, a seismologist told Greek TV.

WATCH: Tourists run for cover as earthquake rattles Greece, Turkey

The tremor, whose magnitude was initially reported as 6.9, was very shallow, just 6.2 miles (10 km) below the seabed, the U.S. Geological Survey said.

Story continues below advertisement

Turkey’s emergency authorities warned against aftershocks, but added there had been no casualties or major damage.

“Our people should know that aftershocks are continuing, so they should refrain from entering damaged or vulnerable structures,” AFAD head Mehmet Halis Bilden told broadcaster CNN Turk.

Television footage from the province of Mugla showed hundreds of people abandoning buildings and waiting on the streets, as cars shook and items fell off store shelves.

Mugla Governor Esengul Civelek told a news conference there were no initial reports of major damage, although Mayor Osman Gurun said power outages hit parts of the province.

Turkey’s location between the Arabian tectonic plate and the Eurasian plate renders it prone to earthquakes.

In October 2011, more than 600 people died in the eastern province of Van following a 7.2-magnitude quake and powerful aftershocks. In 1999, two massive earthquakes killed about 20,000 people in Turkey’s densely populated northwest.

Story continues below advertisement

The same year, a 5.9 magnitude quake killed 143 people in Greece.

 

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article