Global Times

Papua New Guinea quake leaves 67 dead; thousands homeless: Red Cross

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At least 67 people were killed by an earthquake that devastated Papua New Guinea’s remote highlands last week, the Red Cross said Monday, with thousands more homeless and without food and clean water.

The recovery effort has been slow as aid workers grapple with blocked roads and power outages to reach cut-off villages after the 7.5-magnitude quake struck on February 26 in the Pacific nation’s mountainou­s interior.

Terrified locals in the Southern Highlands, Western, Enga and Hela provinces have also been hit by strong aftershock­s, including two 6.0-magnitude tremors early Monday.

Compoundin­g the fallout was an announceme­nt Monday that the impoverish­ed country’s biggest-ever developmen­t – the PNG LNG project operated by US energy giant ExxonMobil – would be offline for up to eight weeks as the quake-hit facilities are repaired.

“The death toll reported by the National Disaster Centre and disaster management teams on Friday is 67,” the PNG country head of the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies Udaya Regmi told AFP from the capital Port Moresby.

“Around 143,000 people are affected and 17,000 people have been generally displaced because their homes are either fully or partially damaged and not in a condition to live in.”

No official government death toll has been released.

Regmi added that water and sanitation were major concerns for local communitie­s, with relief workers unable to get bigger food trucks through to some areas because of damage to roads by landslides.

Relief efforts are slowly being expanded, with millions of dollars in aid pledged by the government, ExxonMobil and the Australian energy producers, Oil Search and Santos, which are involved in the gas project.

The Australian and New Zealand defense forces have began delivering aid, while the China Red Cross and Beijing have pledged financial assistance, according to the PNG Post-Courier.

Oil Search managing director Peter Botten, who traveled to the Highlands to survey the damage, said the impact “has been enormous, with many deaths in the region as well as the destructio­n of houses, schools, roads and bridges.”

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