Calgary Herald

Quake jolts Greek, Turkish resorts

- MICHAEL PROBST, DEREK GATOPOULOS ZEYNEP BILGINSOY AND

• A powerful overnight earthquake shook holiday resorts in Greece and Turkey, injuring nearly 500 people and leaving two tourists dead on the Greek island of Kos, where revellers at a bar were crushed in a building collapse.

Only a few miles apart, Kos and the Turkish resort of Bodrum were hit by the shallow undersea quake that caused a two- foot ( 60- cm) sea swell and havoc among residents and thousands of vacationer­s at bars and restaurant­s.

Some of the injuries were caused as tourists and local residents scrambled out of buildings and even leapt from balconies after the 6.7-magnitude quake struck at about 1:30 a.m. local time.

Several hundred thousand vacationer­s and locals in the two countries were kept awake by dozens of aftershock­s that followed the main quake, with many sleeping outdoors on sunbeds or slumped on café tables.

Authoritie­s on Kos said the two dead tourists were from Sweden and Turkey. Thirteen others injured were airlifted to other Greek hospitals, include a foreign national who had to have a leg amputated and another with life-threatenin­g head injuries.

In neighbouri­ng Turkey, authoritie­s said some 350 people were hurt, most with light injuries as they fled buildings.

Seismologi­sts said the shallow depth of the quake was to blame for the damage and the 60-centimetre sea swell that scattered cars, boats, and trash bins across shorelines in the east Aegean Sea.

Hundreds of revellers were in or near the popular White Corner Club — housed in a renovated building dating to the 1930s — in the old town of Kos when the building partially collapsed.

Christophe­r Hackland, a Scottish diving instructor, described the chaotic scene at his hotel when the quake struck.

“There was banging. There was shaking. The light was swinging, banging on the ceiling, crockery falling out of the cupboards, and pans were making noise,” he told The Associated Press.

“There was a lot of screaming and crying and hysterics coming from the hotel. It felt like being at a theme park with one of the illusions, an optical illusion where you feel like you’re upside down.”

Kos resident Vassilis Megas said the earthquake was “shocking, terrifying ... The whole house shook back and forth. People ran out into streets. We did too, and stayed out all night.”

Turkey sent a vessel to Kos to bring some 200 Turkish tourists home, and named the dead tourist as Sinan Kurdoglu. The foreign ministry said a second national in serious condition was being evacuated to Athens for treatment.

The quake on Kos damaged churches, an old mosque, and the port’s 14thcentur­y castle, along with old buildings in the town — but the damage was relatively limited.

Kos Mayor Giorgos Kyritsis said strict building codes have been in force for decades following a deadly earthquake in 1933 that flattened the island’s main town.

“There are not many old buildings left on Kos. Nearly all the structures on the island have been built under the new codes to withstand earthquake­s,” the mayor said.

Before dawn rescue teams with sniffer dogs searched the rubble in the town while dozens of villages were also checked — but found no more injured people.

Sweden’s foreign ministry has confirmed that the second victim of the earthquake that struck the Greek island of Kos overnight was a 20-year-old man who lived in central Sweden.

The quake caused cracks on walls of some buildings in the Turkish resort of Bodrum, flooded the lower floors of seafront hotels and restaurant­s and sent moored boats crashing toward the shore.

The Istanbul-based Kandilli earthquake research centre said the small “tsunami” pushed sea water up to 100 metres inland.

The EU was offering emergency equipment, personnel and satellite imagery to help Greece deal with the aftermath.

 ?? LOUISA GOULIAMAKI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? A boy walks by a car crushed under rubble near the port of the Greek island of Kos following an earthquake that struck Greek and Turkish holiday destinatio­ns early Friday. Two tourists died and nearly 500 people were injured.
LOUISA GOULIAMAKI / AFP / GETTY IMAGES A boy walks by a car crushed under rubble near the port of the Greek island of Kos following an earthquake that struck Greek and Turkish holiday destinatio­ns early Friday. Two tourists died and nearly 500 people were injured.

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