Miami Herald

Earthquake kills at least 7 in Croatia

- BY MARC SANTORA AND JOE OROVIC

At least seven people were killed, dozens were wounded and several towns in central Croatia were left in ruins after a 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck Tuesday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey and Croatian officials.

The full extent of casualties was not known, and as daylight faded, emergency crews, assisted by the military, searched the wreckage for survivors.

The quake, which hit just after noon local time about 30 miles from the capital, Zagreb, could be felt across the Balkans and as far away as Hungary. It followed a smaller earthquake a day earlier and another in March, rattling residents in the earthquake-prone re

gion.

The epicenter of the quake was near the towns of Petrinja and Sisak, which is home to the region’s largest hospital, rendered largely unusable because of damage. Although people injured in the quake were still being taken to the

facility to be triaged, including two in critical condition, the government said it would evacuate the patients there. That effort would also include moving 40 coronaviru­s patients to other facilities.

One person was reported to have been killed in the

city.

In Petrinja, a town of around 25,000 people, the mayor said he walked by the body of a 12-year-old girl on the street.

“This is a catastroph­e,” said the mayor, Darinko Dumbovic. “My city is completely destroyed,” he said in an emotional telephone interview that was broadcast on Croatian state television.

“We need firefighte­rs; we don’t know what’s under the surfaces, a roof fell on a car. We need help.”

He added: “Mothers are crying for their children.”

In the nearby village of Glina, officials said four people who died had been pulled from the rubble.

The government lifted travel restrictio­ns put in place to contain the coronaviru­s so that assistance could arrive more quickly and to allow those whose homes were destroyed to travel to relatives.

In neighborin­g Slovenia, the state news agency said the country’s sole nuclearpow­er plant, about 60 miles from the epicenter, was shut down as a precaution.

 ?? Associated Press ?? A mother, left, mourns for her 12-year old daughter, who was killed during an earthquake in Petrinja, Croatia, on Tuesday.
Associated Press A mother, left, mourns for her 12-year old daughter, who was killed during an earthquake in Petrinja, Croatia, on Tuesday.
 ?? Associated Press ?? Rubble covers a car in Petrinja, Croatia, on Tuesday.
Associated Press Rubble covers a car in Petrinja, Croatia, on Tuesday.

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