The Borneo Post

Officials: Earthquake in Peru kills at least four

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LIMA: A moderate 5.3-magnitude earthquake in Peru killed at least four people including a US tourist and left 68 injured, crushing villagers under rubble and blocking roads, officials said Monday.

The quake late Sunday knocked down about 50 homes and cut off roads and power in the southern Arequipa region.

“It was tragic. They got wounded people out as best they could,” said John Rivera, a resident of Yanque, a hard-hit rural village of mud huts.

“The electricit­y has got cut off. We still have water but we don’t know what will happen next,” he told RPP radio.

Authoritie­s used a military plane to transport about 7.5 tons of food to meet the basic needs of the more than 1,200 people affected by the disaster.

The civil defense service said one of the victims was a 66-yearold American who died in a hotel in Yanque that was badly damaged.

Earthquake­s are fairly common in Peru but this one hit at a shallow depth of eight kilometers (five miles) so damage could be heavy near the epicenter.

The epicenter was 10 kilometers from the city of Chivay, capital of Caylloma province, according to the Geophysica­l Institute of Peru.

Several aftershock­s struck

It was tragic. They got wounded people out as best they could. John Rivera, a resident of Yanque

Monday.

The quake caused damage throughout an area of Arequipa called the Colca Valley, and several villages have been cut off.

“We felt a very strong tremor. It has caused devastatio­n in the whole Colca Valley,” the mayor of Caylloma, Romulo Tinta, told RPP.

“We have no communicat­ion links between the surroundin­g villages,” he added. “We are asking for heavy machinery to gain access.”

The governor of Arequipa, Yamila Osorio, called for food and clothing to be airlifted to people left homeless by the quake.

“We are taking aid to Caylloma and the other districts affected by the earthquake,” Peru’s President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski said in a message on Twitter.

More than 80 homes have been left uninhabita­ble, but crews cannot reach the epicenter, Osorio said.

“We will have to declare an emergency in this zone,” said Prime Minister Fernando Zavala.

Among the worst-hit spots was Yanque, where about 60 per cent of the buildings in the village – home to some 1,200 inhabitant­s – were destroyed, said local mayor Anastasia Suyco.

She said land access to the area was cut off.

“What we most need is to evacuate the wounded,” she told RPP.

“There are people who have been crushed by walls. The buildings here are rustic.”

Highway police official Leandro Flores told reporters work was under way to clear two major roads in the Chivay region.

The blocked roads were making it difficult for rescue teams to reach the region, Civil Defence chief Alfredo Murgueytio said.

Peru lies on the so- called ‘Ring of Fire’ – an arc of fault lines that circles the Pacific Basin and is prone to frequent earthquake­s and volcanic eruptions.

The last serious quake in Peru – with a magnitude of 7.9 – struck on August 15, 2007.

Its epicenter was on the central coast, just west of the major city of Pisco. It killed 595 people.

Two major 7.6-magnitude earthquake­s jolted eastern Peru near its border with Brazil in November.

They were felt across several South American nations, but no major damage was reported. —AFP

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? A woman observes the damage in her home in the Andean town of Chivay in southern Peru caused by a 5.3 magnitude earthquake that struck this remote picturesqu­e region in the state of Arequipa on Sunday night.
— AFP photo A woman observes the damage in her home in the Andean town of Chivay in southern Peru caused by a 5.3 magnitude earthquake that struck this remote picturesqu­e region in the state of Arequipa on Sunday night.
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