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Massive quake hits Peru

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By MONTE HAYES and MAURICIO MUNOZ, Associated Press Writer 21 minutes ago

 

 

CHINCHA, Peru - At least 337 people were killed by a powerful 7.9-magnitude earthquake that shook Peru's coast, toppling buildings, shattering roads and injuring more than 827 others, officials said Thursday.

 

 

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Rescue workers struggled to reach the center of the devastation, the port city of Pisco about 125 miles southeast of the capital, Lima. Pisco's mayor said at least 200 people were buried in the rubble of a church where they had been attending a service.

"The dead are scattered by the dozens on the streets," Mayor Juan Mendoza told Lima radio station CPN.

 

 

"We don't have lights, water, communications. Most houses have fallen, churches, stores, hotels, everything is destroyed," he said, sobbing.

 

 

An AP Television News cameraman who reached the city of Chincha, about 100 miles southeast of Lima, said he counted 30 bodies under bloody sheets on the floor of the hospital, which was badly damaged.

 

 

Another church collapsed Wednesday evening in the city of Ica, 165 miles south of Lima, killing 17, according to cable news station Canal N.

 

 

The government rushed police, soldiers, doctors and aid to the stricken areas along the coast south of the capital but hundreds of vehicles were paralyzed on the Pan American Highway by giant cracks in the pavement and fallen power lines, the AP Television News cameraman reported from Chincha.

 

 

Giorgio Ferrario, head of the Peruvian International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, said that he expects the death toll to rise now that rescue teams are working in daylight.

 

 

Ferrario said teams from the Peruvian Red Cross arrived in Ica and Pisco after 7 1/2 hours, about three times as long as it would normally have taken because the earthquake had destroyed the roads to these areas.

 

source yahoo.com

 

:(

  • Author

news are getting worse.. :cry:

 

 

UN: Peru quake death toll reaches 450

 

By MARTIN MEJIA and MAURICIO MUNOZ, Associated Press Writers 5 minutes ago

 

ICA, Peru - Rescuers struggled across a shattered countryside on Thursday to reach victims of a magnitude-8.0 earthquake that the U.N. said killed at least 450 people. More than 1,500 people were reported injured.

 

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The center of the destruction was in Peru's southern desert, in the oasis city of Ica and the nearby port of Pisco, about 125 miles southeast of the capital, Lima. Pisco's mayor said at least 200 people were buried in the rubble of a church where they had been attending a service.

 

In New York, U.N. Assistant Secretary-General Margareta Wahlstrom told reporters that Peruvian authorities told her agency that the death toll had risen to 450.

 

In Ica, a city of 120,000 near the epicenter, a fourth of the buildings collapsed, at least 57 bodies were brought to the morgue and injured parents and children crowded into a hospital where they waited for attention on cots. Several Ica churches also were damaged, including the historic Senor de Luren church. Cable news station Canal N said 17 people were killed inside one.

The earthquake hit at 6:40 p.m. Wednesday, when attendance at churches was high because Aug. 15 is a Roman Catholic holy day celebrated as the occasion when the Virgin Mary passed into heaven.

 

President Alan Garcia flew to Ica in a helicopter and declared an emergency in the region. He said aid flights were reaching Ica, and that the injured were being evacuated to Lima.

 

The earthquake's magnitude was raised from 7.9 to 8 on Thursday by the U.S. Geological Survey. At least 15 aftershocks followed, some as strong as magnitude-6.3.

 

The scope of the destruction became more evident as the frigid dawn broke, revealing thick stone and masonry walls in piles around the region. The quake knocked out telephone and mobile phone service between the capital and the disaster zone. Electricity also was cut, with power lines drooping dangerously into the streets.

 

The government rushed police, soldiers, doctors and aid to the area, but traffic was paralyzed by giant cracks and fallen power lines on the Panamerican Highway south of Lima. Large boulders also blocked Peru's Central Highway to the Andes mountains. Rescue flights from Colombia and Panama were being prepared, but it wasn't immediately clear when they could arrive.

 

In Chincha, a small town 20 miles north of Pisco, an AP Television News cameraman counted 30 bodies under bloody sheets on a patio of the badly damaged hospital. About 200 people were waiting to be treated in walkways and gardens, kept outside for fear that aftershocks could topple the cracked walls.

 

"Our services are saturated and half of the hospital has collapsed," Dr. Huber Malma said as he single-handedly attended to dozens of people.

 

Chincha looked as if it had been bombed. Large areas were completely leveled; dozens of homes made with adobe bricks had collapsed. Townspeople picked through the rubble of their homes, wrapped in sheets that made them look like ghosts in the early dawn.

 

"We're all frightened to return to our houses," Maria Cortez said, staring vacantly at the half of her house that was still standing.

The Peruvian Red Cross arrived in Ica and Pisco 7 1/2 hours after the initial quake, about three times as long as it would normally have taken because of road damage, said Red Cross official Giorgio Ferrario.

 

"The dead are scattered by the dozens on the streets," Pisco Mayor Juan Mendoza told Lima radio station CPN.

"We don't have lights, water, communications. Most houses have fallen. Churches, stores, hotels — everything is destroyed," the mayor said, sobbing.

 

In Lima, about 95 miles from the epicenter, only one death was recorded, and some homes collapsed. But the furious two minutes of shaking prompted thousands of people to flee into the streets and sleep in public parks for safety.

"This is the strongest earthquake I've ever felt," said Maria Pilar Mena, 47, a sandwich vendor in Lima. "When the quake struck, I thought it would never end."

Antony Falconi, 27, was desperately trying to get public transportation home as hundreds of people milled on the streets flagging down buses in the dark.

"Who isn't going to be frightened?" Falconi said. "The earth moved differently this time. It made waves and the earth was like jelly."

Firefighters put out a fire in a shopping center. State doctors called off a national strike that began on Wednesday to handle the emergency. President Alan Garcia also said public schools would be closed Thursday because the buildings may be unsafe.

Peru's Civil Defense agency said that at least 1,500 were injured.

The earthquake hit about 90 miles southeast of Lima at a depth of about 19 miles, when one of the region's two constantly shifting plates dove under the other quickly, according to Amy Vaughan, a USGS geophysicist at the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo.

Scientists said Wednesday's deadly quake was a "megathrust" — a type of earthquake similar to the catastrophic Indian Ocean temblor in 2004 that generated deadly tsunami waves.

"Megathrusts produce the largest earthquakes on the planet," said USGS geophysicist Paul Earle.

The latest temblor occurred in one of the most seismically active regions in the world at the boundary where the Nazca and South American tectonic plates meet. The two plates are moving together at a rate of 3 inches per year and the quake happened when the Nazca plate dove beneath the South American plate, releasing tremendous energy, Earle said.

In Washington, the State Department said the U.S. Embassy in Lima had confirmed that one American citizen had perished in the quake but could not give specifics about the deceased.

Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security Council, said a USAID team is on the ground in Lima assessing the situation with officials in Peru, and the U.S. has U.S. search and rescue teams on standby should they be needed.

The last time a quake of magnitude 7.0 or larger struck Peru was in September 2005, when a 7.5-magnitude earthquake rocked the country's northern jungle, killing four people. In 2001, a 7.9-magnitude quake struck near the southern Andean city of Arequipa, killing 71.

 

Source Yahoo.com

  • 4 months later...

mmm! i'm from and i lived this earthquake, it was horrible!

luckily, i live in Lima and the disaster wasn't big

Wow. I'm glad you're ok. Every time I hear aabout a disaster somewhere in the world, I say a little prayer that our forum members will be all right.

 

...and another one for the people who didn't survive.

Wow, thats so horrible...we've never had an earthquake here (I don't think I live in the right place) but they sound horrible! Glad you're Ok!

We had a little one here a few years ago, only minor structural damage, but it sacred the s**t out of me!

glad you're ok.... hope everything goes all right for all of you down there

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