The Hamilton Spectator

State media downplay quake toll

Second deadly quake to hit Iran in less than a week

- NASSER KARIMI

TEHRAN, IRAN A major earthquake flattened homes and offices on both sides of the Iran-Pakistan border Tuesday, rattling buildings as f ar away as New Delhi and Dubai. Iranian state media said at least 46 people died, but later Iranian reports offered a far milder picture.

The discrepanc­ies and apparent backtracki­ng in the Iranian reports could not be immediatel­y reconciled, but Iran has f aced two large quakes in less than week and authoritie­s could seek to downplay casualties.

Iran’s state-run Press TV initially said at least 40 people were killed on the Iranian side, but later removed the figure from its website and news scroll. Other state-controlled outlets, including the official IRNA news agency, mentioned no deaths and only injuries, quoting a local official.

The website of Tehran Geophysics Center said the quake, measured at least magnitude 7.7, lasted 40 seconds and called it the strongest in more than 50 years in one of the world’s most seismicall­y active areas. Press TV called it “massive.”

It also was the second deadly quake to hit Iran in less than a week after a magnitude 6.1 temblor struck near Bushehr, on Iran’s Persian Gulf coast, killing at least 37 people and raising calls for greater internatio­nal safety inspectors at Iran’s lone nuclear reactor nearby.

Press TV said the quake was cen- tred near Saravan, about 50 kilometres from the Pakistani border. The U.S. Geological Survey put the preliminar­y magnitude at 7.8 and at a depth of 15 kilometres.

Press TV said at least 40 people were killed, but gave no other immediate details on the extent of damage or casualties. Later, the reference to the death toll was dropped from Press TV’s website and the news agency IRNA said only that at least 27 people were injured.

State-run Pakistan Television, meanwhile, said at least six people were killed on its side of the border and at least 47 others were injured. Up to 1,000 mud homes were damaged, it added.

A Pakistani police officer, Azmatullah Regi, said nearly three dozen homes and shops collapsed in one village in the Mashkel area, which was the hardest hit by the quake. Rescue workers pulled the bodies of a couple and their three children, aged 5 to 15, from the rubble of one house, he said.

The Pakistani army ordered paramilita­ry troops to assist with rescue operations and provide medical treatment. Additional troops are being moved to the area, and army helicopter­s were mobilized to carry medical staff, tents, medicine and other relief items.

In Iran, the Red Crescent said it was facing a “complicate­d emergency situation” in the area with villages scattered over desolate hills and valleys.

The quake was felt over a vast area from New Delhi — about 1,500 kilometres from the epicentre — to Gulf cities that have some of the world’s tallest skyscraper­s, including the record 828-metre Burj Kha- lifa in Dubai. Officials ordered temporary evacuation­s from the Burj Khalifa and some other high-rises as a precaution.

A resident in the quake zone in Iran, Manouchehr Karimi, told The Associated Press by phone that “the quake period was long” and occurred “when many people were at home to take a midday nap.”

Pakistani news channels showed buildings shaking in the southern city of Karachi, where people in panic came out from offices and homes.

In a message posted on Twitter, British Foreign Secretary William Hague sent condolence­s to families of those lost in the Iran earthquake.

In 2003, some 26,000 people were killed by a magnitude 6.6 quake that flattened the historic southeaste­rn Iranian city of Bam.

 ?? SHAKIL ADIL, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People evacuate buildings and gather on the street as Tuesday’s earthquake was felt in Karachi, Pakistan.
SHAKIL ADIL, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People evacuate buildings and gather on the street as Tuesday’s earthquake was felt in Karachi, Pakistan.

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