Gulf Today

Five dead in ‘massive’ Papua New Guinea quake

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PORT MORESBY: A 7.6-magnitude earthquake shook Papua New Guinea on Sunday, damaging buildings, triggering landslides and killing at least five people, with several others severely injured.

Residents in northern towns near the epicentre reported intense shaking mid-morning that cracked roads and ratled the cladding off buildings.

Local member of parliament Kessy Sawang said at least two people had died in remote mountain villages, with four others airlited to hospital in critical condition.

“There has been widespread damage,” she said, adding that a landslide had buried homes and “split” one village where people had “lost their houses.”

In nearby Wau, Koranga Alluvial Mining said three miners had been buried alive.

There are limited communicat­ions in the area, few government resources and very few paved roads, making assessment and rescue efforts difficult.

Small aviation companies and missionary groups were involved in airliting some of the injured across the rugged jungle landscape.

“It’s very difficult, the terrain, the weather. It’s challengin­g,” said Nellie Pumai of Manolos Aviation, which had transporte­d one person out and was trying to return.

In the eastern highland town of Goroka, residents captured images of window awnings falling off the cracked walls of a local university.

It was “very strong,” said Hivi Apokore, a worker at the Jais Aben Resort near the coastal town of Madang.

“Everything was like siting on a sea - just floating.” The quake was felt as far as the capital Port Moresby about 480 kilometres away.

The US Geological Survey initially issued a tsunami warning for nearby coastal areas, but subsequent­ly said the threat had passed.

But fearful locals near the sea neverthele­ss fled for higher ground - reporting that the water level had suddenly dropped.

The nation’s leader, James Marape, said the quake was “massive” and told people to be cautious, but said he expected the damage to be less than that from a 2018 quake and series of atershocks, which killed an estimated 150 people.

However, the scale of the damage and number of casualties from Sunday’s quake was still unclear.

“National and provincial disaster agencies, as well as leaders, have been asked to assess the damage and injuries to people and atend to these as soon as possible,” Marape said.

State-backed communicat­ions firm Dataco said it was experienci­ng “multiple service disruption­s” to the operation of a domestic undersea communicat­ions cable as well as the PIPE Pacific Cable 1 that runs from Sydney to Guam.

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