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Learn Chinese online - Quake triggers tsunami in Indonesia

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WORLD / Europe

Quake triggers tsunami in Indonesia

(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-09-13 02:02

JAKARTA, Indonesia - A powerful earthquake shook Indonesia on Wednesday,
killing at least five people, injuring scores and triggering a small
tsunami that hit one city on the island of Sumatra, authorities said.

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A member of an Indonesian military rescue team walks through a collapsed
building after a strong earthquake struck in Padang, Indonesia's West
Sumatra province September 12, 2007. [Reuters]

The 8.4-magnitude quake off Sumatra damaged homes, mosques and shopping
malls along the coast and could be felt in at least four countries, with
tall buildings swaying as far as 1,200 miles away.

It was followed by a series of aftershocks, the strongest of which
registered at a magnitude of 6.6 and triggered a second tsunami alert for
Indonesia, which was lifted about an hour later, said Suhardjono, an
official with Indonesia's meteorological agency, who goes by only one
name.

At least five people were killed. The Health Ministry reported two people
killed in Bengkulu, a town in Sumatra close to the epicenter. And in the
city of Padang, three bodies were pulled from badly damaged buildings, a
witness, Alfin, said by phone.

Excavation machinery was used to search for survivors.

Most of the damage appeared to be from the quake.

A tsunami about 3 feet high was reported to have struck Padang about 20
minutes after the initial quake, Suhardjono said, adding that severed
phone lines made it hard to get details. The Pacific Tsunami Warning
Center also reported that a small tsunami hit Padang.

Several buildings in Padang were damaged and at least one car showroom
collapsed in the quake, according to detik.com, which said people were
searching to see if anyone was inside.

Dozens of people were injured in Bengkulu, local government official
Salamun Harius told El Shinta radio. At least 100 others were
hospitalized, senior Health Ministry official Rustam Pakaya said.

Residents in Bengkulu, where at least one building was demolished, said
the quake triggered panic and that people ran inland.

"Everyone is running out of their houses in every direction," said Wati
Said, who spoke by cell phone standing outside her house. "We think our
neighborhood is high enough. God willing, if the water comes, it will not
touch us here."

"Communication is cut, we can't call out," she added. "I don't know how
you contacted us. Everyone is afraid."

The quake could be felt in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, 375 miles
away, where office workers streamed down the stairwells of tall, swaying
buildings. It also caused tall buildings to sway in neighboring Malaysia,
Singapore and Thailand.

The undersea quake hit at about 6:10 pm (7:10 am EDT), the US Geological
Survey said. It was centered 80 miles southwest of Sumatra island at a
depth of 18.6 miles.

"Earthquakes of this size have the potential to generate a widespread
destructive tsunami that can affect coastlines across the entire Indian
Ocean Basin," the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said, warning that waves
could hit Indonesia and Australia within an hour, and Sri Lanka and India
within three hours.

It lifted the alert for Indonesia about two hours later, saying there was
no longer a potential for a destructive wave.

An official with Thailand's National Disaster Warning Center, Passakorn
Khanthasap, said it had sent cell phone text messages alerting hundreds
of officials in six southern provinces.

The Kenyan and Tanzanian governments issued tsunami warnings and told
people to leave beaches.

Residents of the coastal city of Mombasa crowded into buses and left
sprawling public beaches after hearing the warning over the radio. Police
were moving people off the coastline.

In Seychelles, which would likely be hit by a tsunami before Kenya,
authorities said they had downgraded a tsunami warning because the window
for a strike had passed.

In India, officials said nothing was felt in the remote Andaman and
Nicobar islands, some of which are just 150 miles north of Sumatra.

The Indian government issued a tsunami alert for the islands, and
officials told authorities to take precautions, said Dharam Pal, the
regional relief commissioner. In Australia, the tsunami warning was
lifted after only small rises in the sea level were measured at Cocos
Island and the Christmas Islands. But officials warned residents to stay
away from the ocean, warning that dangerous waves and currents could
still affect beaches, harbors and rivers for several hours.

Indonesia, the world's largest archipelago, is prone to seismic upheaval
due to its location on the so-called Pacific "Ring of Fire," an arc of
volcanos and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.

In December 2004, a magnitude-9 earthquake struck off Sumatra island and
triggered a tsunami that killed more than 230,000 people in a dozen
countries, including 160,000 people in Indonesia's westernmost province
of Aceh.

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