MAGNITUDE 7.2 EARTHQUAKE HITS SOUTH AND CENTRAL MEXICO
People and their dogs remain on a street during a powerful earthquake in Mexico City on February 16, 2018. (AFP) |
Prolonged
quake shakes buildings across the capital Mexico City, with the epicentre close
to the Pacific coast in the southern state of Oaxaca, according to the US
Geological Survey.
#Breaking— Tom Hall ☘ (@TomHall) February 17, 2018
Major 7.2 #Earthquake
in southwest Mexico
🇲🇽 #Quakes #FridayFeeling pic.twitter.com/sCRJcV49hV
A powerful
earthquake shook south and central Mexico on Friday, causing people to flee
buildings and office towers in the country's capital, and setting off quake
alert systems.
Crowds of people
gathered on central Reforma Avenue in Mexico City as the ground shook.
The US Geological
Survey put the quake's preliminary magnitude at 7.2 and said its epicentre was
53 kilometres northeast of Pinotepa in Oaxaca state. It had a depth of 24
kilometres.
— Gustavo Serrano (@gooz25) February 16, 2018
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said there was no tsunami threat after the earthquake.Video shows lights swaying in office building in Mexico City when strong #earthquake hit the country pic.twitter.com/cQSGNm0cdd— China Xinhua News (@XHNews) February 17, 2018
The Oaxaca state
civil protection agency said it was monitoring the coastline and that no damage
had been reported so far.
In Mexico City, tall
buildings swayed for more than a minute as seismic alarms sounded throughout
the city, and tremors were felt as far away as Guatemala to the south.
Television images
showed thousands of people in the streets in the city centre, where crowds had
gathered to celebrate the Chinese New Year.
"It was
awful," said Mercedes Rojas Huerta, 57, who was sitting on a bench outside
her home in Mexico City's trendy Condesa district, too frightened to go back
inside.
"It started to
shake; the cars were going here and there. What do I do?"
She said she was
still scared thinking of September 19 earthquake last year that left 228 people
dead in the capital and 369 across the region.
Many buildings in
Mexico City are still damaged from that quake.
Mexican Civil
Protection chief Luis Felipe Fuente tweeted that there were no immediate
reports of major damages from Friday's quake.
The Red Cross
reported the facade from a building in the Condesa neighbourhood, which was hit
hard on September 19, collapsed.
In the Condesa
neighbourhood, frightened residents flooded into the streets, including one
woman wrapped in just a towel, but there were no immediate signs of damage.
"I'm
scared," Rojas Huerta said. "The house is old."
SOURCE:
TRT WORLD
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