Strong quake hits Greek island of Crete; 1 dead, 9 injured

Strong quake hits Greek island of Crete; 1 dead, 9 injured

Greece: An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of at least 5.8 struck the Greek island of Crete on Monday, killing one person and injuring several others while damaging homes and churches and causing rock slides near the country’s fourth-largest city.
The quake sent people fleeing into the streets in the city of Heraklion, and schools were evacuated. Repeated aftershocks rattled the area, adding to damage in villages near the epicentre.
The earthquake was strong and was long in duration, Heraklion mayor Vassilis Lambrinos told private Antenna television.
The Athens Geodynamic Institute, which gave the 5.8 magnitude, said the quake struck at 9:17 am (0617 GMT), with an epicentre 246 kilometres (153 miles) south southeast of the Greek capital, Athens.
This is not an event that occurred without warning. We have seen activity in this region for several months. This was a strong earthquake, it was not undersea but under land and affecting populated areas, seismologist Gerasimos Papadopoulos said on Greece’s state broadcaster ERT.
The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre and the US Geological Survey put the preliminary magnitude of 6.0, with an epicentre seven kilometers (four miles) north of the village of Thrapsano. It is common for different seismological institutes to give varying magnitudes for an earthquake in the initial hours and days after an event. Greece’s Climate Crisis and Civil Protection Ministry said one person had been killed and a further nine people suffered injuries. The man who died was pulled from the rubble of a partially collapsed church in the village of Arkalochori, very close to the epicentre, authorities said.
“It appears that until now we don’t have fellow citizens trapped,” government spokesman Giannis Oikonomou said during a media briefing about three hours after the quake struck. Seismologist Efthimios Lekkas, who heads Greece’s Earthquake Planning and Protection Organisation, said inspections of critical buildings such as schools and hospitals had already begun.
We are urging people who live in damaged older buildings to remain outdoors. One aftershock can cause a collapse, Lekkas said from Crete. We are talking about structures built before 1970. Structures built after 1985 are built to a higher standard that can withstand the effect of an earthquake.
Climate Crisis and Civil Protection Minister Christos Stylianides, who travelled to Crete, said measures would be taken for those who couldn’t spend the night in their homes, potentially including providing rooms in hotels. Local media said hundreds of homes had been damaged.
–PTI

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