Hmmm..........At
least 60 people died when the most powerful earthquake to hit Mexico in
over eight decades tore through buildings and forced mass evacuations
in the poor southern states of Oaxaca and Chiapas, triggering alerts as
far away as Southeast Asia.
The 8.1 magnitude quake off the southern coast late Thursday was stronger than a devastating 1985 temblor that flattened swathes of Mexico City and killed thousands.
This time damage to the city was limited as the quake was deeper and
farther away, but it still sent thousands of people scurrying from their
homes onto the streets when the violent rumbling began that also shook
Guatemala and El Salvador.
“It almost knocked me over,” said Gildardo Arenas Rios, a 64-year-old security guard in MexicoCity’s Juarez neighborhood, who was making his rounds when buildings started to tremble.
“It almost knocked me over,” said Gildardo Arenas Rios, a 64-year-old security guard in MexicoCity’s Juarez neighborhood, who was making his rounds when buildings started to tremble.
The
Oaxacan town of Juchitan on Mexico’s narrowest point bore the brunt of
the disaster, with sections of the town hall, a hotel, a church, a bar
and other buildings reduced to rubble.
“The
situation is Juchitan is critical; this is the most terrible moment in
its history,” the local mayor, Gloria Sanchez, said a few hours before
President Enrique Pena Nieto flew to the battered town to oversee rescue
efforts.
Facades
of shattered buildings, fallen tiles and broken glass from shop fronts
and banks littered the pavements of Juchitan while heavily armed
soldiers patrolled and stood guard at areas cordoned off due to the
extent of the damage.
Startled
residents stepped through the rubble of about 100 wrecked buildings,
including houses, a flattened Volkswagen dealership and Juchitan’s
shattered town hall. Scores paced the terrain or sat outside warily,
mindful of the frequent aftershocks.
“Look
at what it did to my house,” said Maria Magdalena Lopez, in tears
outside its battered walls. “It was horrifying, it fell down.”
Alma
Rosa, sitting in vigil with a relative by the body of a loved one
draped in a red shroud, said: “We went to buy a coffin, but there aren’t
any because there are so many bodies.”
All the deaths were in three neighboring states clustered near the epicenter that lay about 70 km (40 miles) off the coast.
In
Oaxaca, 45 people died, many of them in Juchitan, while in Chiapas 12
and in Tabasco three people lost their lives, according to federal and
state officials.
In
Chiapas, home to many of Mexico’s indigenous ethnic groups, thousands
of people in coastal areas were evacuated as a precaution when the quake
sparked tsunami warnings.
Waves rose as high as 2.3 feet (0.7 meter) in Mexico, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said, though that threat passed.
State
oil company Pemex said it was checking its installations for damage and
closed the Salina Cruz refinery in the same region as the epicenter as a
precautionary measure. It began restarting the 330,000 barrel-per-day
refinery on Friday afternoon.
WOKEN IN THE NIGHT
At least 250 people in Oaxaca were also injured, according to agriculture minister Jose Calzada.
Classes
were suspended in much of central and southern Mexico on Friday to
allow authorities to assess the impact. Dozens of schools were damaged,
officials said.
People
ran into the streets in Mexico City, one of the world’s largest
metropolises and home to more than 20 million, and alarms sounded after
the quake struck just before midnight.
Scores stood outside in central neighborhoods, some wrapped in blankets against the cool night air. Children were crying.
Liliana Villa, 35, who was in her apartment when the quake struck, fled in her nightclothes.
“It felt horrible, and I thought, ‘This (building) is going to fall,’” she said.
The
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said the quake’s epicenter was 54 miles
(87 km) southwest of the town of Pijijiapan at a depth of 43 miles (69
km).
John
Bellini, a geophysicist at the USGS National Earthquake Information
Center in Golden, Colorado, said Thursday’s quake was the strongest in
Mexico since an 8.1 temblor struck the western state of Jalisco in 1932.
Across
the Pacific, the national disaster agency of the Philippines put the
country’s eastern seaboard on alert for possible tsunamis, although no
evacuations were ordered.
OUTAGES, AFTERSHOCKS
Rescue
workers searched through the night for anyone trapped in collapsed
buildings, but the toll appeared to be less severe than that seen in
some far less powerful tremors.
Windows
were shattered at Mexico City airport and power went out in several
neighborhoods of the capital, affecting more than 1 million people. The
cornice of a hotel came down in the southern tourist city of Oaxaca, a
witness said.
Mexio
City is built on a spongy, drained lake bed that amplifies earthquakes
along the volcanic country’s multiple seismic fault lines, even when
they occur hundreds of miles away.
The 1985 earthquake was just inland, about 230 miles from Mexico City. Thursday’s quake was 470 miles from the city.
Authorities
reported dozens of aftershocks, and President Pena Nieto said the quake
was felt by around 50 million of Mexico’s roughly 120 million
population.
Mexico
is evaluating whether the quake will trigger a payout from a World
Bank-backed catastrophe bond, Finance Minister Jose Antonio Meade said
on Friday. Meade said the bond’s coverage could reach $150 million,
depending on magnitude and location.
But he said Mexico has sufficient funds to pay for a cleanup whether the bond was triggered or not.
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