The Borneo Post (Sabah)

S. Korea quake leaves dozens injured, 1,500 seeking shelter

-

SEOUL: More than 50 people were injured and 1,500 taken to shelters in South Korea after a rare 5.4-magnitude quake hit the southeaste­rn port of Pohang on Wednesday, officials said yesterday.

The second-most powerful quake recorded in the South hit at a shallow depth of nine kilometres on Wednesday afternoon, sparking alarm in a country that rarely experience­s significan­t tremors.

The quake, which was felt across the country including in the capital Seoul, damaged nearly 1,100 homes and more than 100 schools, the safety ministry said in a statement.

Roads and public and military facilities were also damaged, while 57 people were left injured and 1,536 seeking shelter outside their home, it said — adding no deaths had been reported.

It came about a year after the country’s most powerful quake to date, a 5.8-magnitude tremor that struck another southeaste­rn city, Gyeongju, in September 2016.

Photos of the aftermath of Wednesday’s quake showed damaged homes, shattered storefront­s and cars smashed by fallen bricks.

One video posted on social media showed dozens of students screaming and fleeing in panic as a large brick facade crumbled and fell off the top of a campus building.

As dozens of aftershock­s continued to rattle Pohang, Seoul late Wednesday announced the unusual decision to postpone the country’s all-important nationwide college entrance exam — scheduled for yesterday — by a week.

The annual event is closely watched by the whole nation, which falls silent on the day to help teenagers focus on the test whose result could define their future in the hyper-competitiv­e society.

It was the second time the test has been postponed since 1992, when several test papers were found missing a day before the exam, forcing authoritie­s to delay the event by several weeks.

The Korean peninsula, unlike its neighbour Japan, rarely experience­s significan­t quakes but seismic activity is closely monitored because a spike in activity is often the first indication that North Korea has staged a nuclear test. — AFP

 ??  ?? University students stand in an open space to take shelter after a 5.4-magnitude earthquake in the southeaste­rn port city of Pohang. — AFP photo
University students stand in an open space to take shelter after a 5.4-magnitude earthquake in the southeaste­rn port city of Pohang. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia