Otago Daily Times

State of emergency as PNG struggles

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SYDNEY: Papua New Guinea has declared a state of emergency across its remote and rugged highlands, the country’s Prime Minister Peter O’Neill said yesterday, days after a deadly quake struck the region and killed at least 31 people.

Rescuers have struggled to reach villages buried by landslips near the epicentre, and even hardhit larger towns, since the 7.5magnitude quake wrecked roads and runways on Monday and cloudy weather made helicopter flights difficult since.

‘‘This is an unpreceden­ted disaster,’’ O’Neill said in a statement on Wednesday, while promising 450 million kina ($NZ192 million) in government aid and help from the military.

‘‘A state of emergency has been declared to expedite the restoratio­n of essential public services including healthcare services, schools, road access, airports, power and communicat­ions facilities,’’ he said.

At least 13 people died when landslips covered remote hamlets close to where the quake struck, some 560km northwest of the capital, Port Moresby, an official told Reuters on Thursday.

While the region has no major urban centres, around 670,000 people live within 100km of the epicentre, according to the Red Cross.

Most of the other confirmed fatalities were in or around the provincial capital of Mendi and the town of Tari, 40km from the epicentre, where airports are closed and relief workers are yet to arrive.

‘‘Our people live in scattered hamlets and people are dying slowly — the only means of rescue is through helicopter­s and they are hardly coming,’’ Hela province’s administra­tor, Wil liam Bando, told Reuters from his office in a shipping container in Tari.

‘‘A lot of people are asking for tents, water and medical supplies. It’s a beautiful day here today; we hope a helicopter comes.’’

The Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said it released $221,000 in funds to help relief efforts and would send first aid, water, mosquito nets and shelters, to the region.

Australia has also promised aid and sent a C130 military plane to help with aerial surveys.

Miners and oil and gas companies were also assessing damage to their infrastruc­ture, including a 700km gas pipeline that connects to a coastal liquefacti­on plant, which ExxonMobil Corp on Thursday said was not damaged.

Earthquake­s are common in Papua New Guinea, which sits on the Pacific Ocean’s ‘‘Ring of Fire,’’ a hot spot for seismic activity due to friction between tectonic plates.— Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: SOCIAL MEDIA.VIA REUTERS ?? A damaged building after the 7.5magnitude earthquake in Mendi, Papua New Guinea.
PHOTO: SOCIAL MEDIA.VIA REUTERS A damaged building after the 7.5magnitude earthquake in Mendi, Papua New Guinea.

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