Houston Chronicle

Deadly quake shakes Mexico

- By Maria Verza and Christophe­r Sherman

MEXICO CITY — A powerful earthquake centered near the southern resort of Huatulco killed at least four people, swayed buildings in the capital and sent thousands fleeing into the streets.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said one person was killed and another injured in a building collapse in Huatulco, Oaxaca. Otherwise he said reports were of minor damage from the magnitude 7.4 quake, including broken windows and collapsed walls.

Oaxaca Gov. Alejandro Murat later said a second person was killed in an apparent house collapse in the tiny mountain village of San Juan Ozolotepec.

Federal civil defense authoritie­s reported two more deaths: a worker at the state-run oil company, Pemex, fell to his death from a refinery structure, and a man died in the Oaxaca village of San Agustin Amatengo when a wall fell on him.

Pemex also said the quake caused a fire at its refinery in the Pacific Coast city of Salina Cruz, relatively near the epicenter. It said one worker was injured and the flames were quickly extinguish­ed.

Churches, bridges and highways also sustained damage during the quake.

López Obrador said there had been more than 140 aftershock­s, most of them small.

Seismic alarms sounded midmorning with enough warning for residents to exit buildings. Power was knocked out to some areas.

Helicopter­s flew over downtown Mexico City and police patrols sounded their sirens.

Groups of people still milled around close together on streets and sidewalks in some neighborho­ods of the capital about an hour after the quake. Many weren’t wearing masks despite past appeals from municipal officials for them to do so as a way to curb the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

Inside a Mexico City military barracks converted to COVID-19 hospital, medical staff suited in protective equipment tried to calm anxious patients.

Unable to evacuate isolation areas, patients huddled under a large beam in the women’s ward while a nurse tried to calm one having a panic attack.

Teresa Juárez only could wish for it to pass quickly from her hospital bed where she lay connected to oxygen. Diabetic and with high blood pressure, Juárez said she thought about her five children.

“It’s horrible, you’re here and you don’t know what to do,” she said.

The U.S. Geologic Survey said the quake hit at 10:29 a.m. along Mexico’s southern Pacific Coast at a depth of 16 miles. The epicenter was 7 miles south-southwest of Santa Maria Zapotitlan in Oaxaca state

It was felt in Guatemala and throughout south and central Mexico.

In Huatulco, a laid-back beach destinatio­n known for surfing and small protected coves, the earthquake knocked goods off shelves and some rubble from buildings.

Mari Gonzalez of the Princess Mayev hotel in Huatulco said staff and guests were able to evacuate the building before the quake, but that 45 minutes after the initial quake, they still were outside as strong aftershock­s continued.

“It was strong, very strong,” she said.

Gonzalez said there was some visible broken glass and mirrors, but no major damage. The staff was waiting for the aftershock­s to dissipate before fully evaluating the property.

Local news media reported damage to some buildings in the state capital, Oaxaca City.

The USGS estimated some 2 million people felt strong or moderate shaking and another 49 million felt weak or light shaking.

The earthquake hit a quakeprone region where four undergroun­d tectonic plates come together. In the past 35 years, there have been at least seven magnitude 7 or greater earthquake­s, killing around 10,000 people — most of them in a 1985 8.0 quake.

“This has the potential to be a deadly earthquake and cause significan­t damage,” U.S. Geological Survey seismologi­st Paul Earle said. “This area is capable of and has had larger earthquake­s in the past.”

“There will be aftershock­s,” Earle said. “It is not unexpected to see a magnitude 6 at this point and a number of smaller ones.”

This quake happened when the Cocos plate, which is to the southwest of the area, slipped under the North American plate, Earle said.

“You’ve got all sorts of plates and they’re moving quickly,” Earle said. “The important thing is how fast the plates are moving relative to each other.”

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion forecast a tsunami threat with waves 3 to 10 feet above tide levels along parts of the coasts of Mexico.

 ?? Claudio Cruz / Tribune News Service ?? A man looks at a building after his car was damaged by a broken glass and objects that fell on it in Mexico City during the earthquake. The quake was centered near the southern resort of Huatulco and killed at least four people.
Claudio Cruz / Tribune News Service A man looks at a building after his car was damaged by a broken glass and objects that fell on it in Mexico City during the earthquake. The quake was centered near the southern resort of Huatulco and killed at least four people.
 ?? Eduardo Verdugo / Associated Press ?? A woman and boy sit on swings as they wait for the all-clear to return to their apartment in Mexico City.
Eduardo Verdugo / Associated Press A woman and boy sit on swings as they wait for the all-clear to return to their apartment in Mexico City.

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