Business Standard

Italy earthquake kills at least 120 3 killed in Myanmar earthquake

- AGENCIES REUTERS

The earthquake that struck central Italy on Wednesday has killed at least 120 people, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said.

Most of the quakes are so negligible they are barely felt in the centuries-old communitie­s that dot the landscape, registerin­g only on electronic sensors. But on Wednesday a deadly tremor struck, killing at least 120 people and flattening hundreds of buildings.

With other such disasters seen as inevitable in the future, experts say Italy could do more to protect life and property.

“Italy can expect an earthquake with a magnitude above 6.3 every 15 years on average. That should encourage a greater culture of seismic prevention and civil protection,” said Fabio Tortorici, head of studies at Italy’s Geological Institute.

Wednesday’s quake measured 6.2 and hit just 6 miles (10 km) beneath the surface of the earth, a shallow depth that multiplied its destructiv­e force, according to the US.”The Apennine mountain belt which runs down the spine of Italy is gradually being stretched in a northeast-southwest direction by tectonic forces at a rate of around 3 mm (0.12 inches) per year,” said Richard Walters, lecturer in Earth Sciences at Britain’s Durham University.

“This slow stretching causes stress to build up in the earth’s crust, which is then released in earthquake­s just like this one,” he said.

It was the most destructiv­e such disaster in Italy since 2009, when a quake killed more than 300 people, left 55,000 homeless and devastated the 13th century city of L’Aquila.

That tragedy once again revealed the fragility of Italy’s infrastruc­ture, with both modern and ancient buildings, including churches, hospitals and a college dormitory in the area ravaged by the shaking earth.

A 2008 survey by civil protection experts said only 14 per cent of buildings in the most vulnerable swathe of the country met seismic-safety standards. That same year, new norms were brought in demanding a much higher standard of constructi­on for new buildings, but that still left the vast majority of homes and offices exposed to seismic activity. A powerful earthquake shook central Myanmar on Wednesday, killing at least three people, including two children, and damaging scores of centuries-old Buddhist pagodas around the ancient capital of Bagan. The 6.8 magnitude quake shook buildings across the Southeast Asian country, with tremors felt as far away as Thailand — where witnesses reported high rise towers swaying in Bangkok - Bangladesh and eastern India. “We felt quite heavy shaking for about 10 seconds and started to evacuate the building when there was another strong tremor,” said Vincent Panzani of charity Save the Children. He spoke from Pakkoku, a small town about 25 km (15 miles) northeast of Bagan, the centrepiec­e of Myanmar's rapidly expanding tourism industry. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said the quake struck near the town of Chauk, on the Ayeyarwadd­y River south of Bagan and about 175 km (110 miles) southwest of the country's second city Mandalay, just after 5 pm.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A rescuer stands in front of a collapsed building following an earthquake in Amatrice, central Italy, on Wednesday
PHOTO: REUTERS A rescuer stands in front of a collapsed building following an earthquake in Amatrice, central Italy, on Wednesday

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