Muscat Daily

Papua New Guinea quake toll rises to seven

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Port Moresby, PNG - The death toll from a massive earthquake in Papua New Guinea rose to seven on Monday and is expected to grow as rescuers begin to reach remote landslide-hit communitie­s.

Police Commission­er David Manning said the victims of Sunday’s 7.6-magnitude quake had been found across the central north of the country, where there is widespread damage to homes and infrastruc­ture.

“The tremors caused damage to buildings and public roads,” he said, adding ‘a number of landslides were triggered’.

Three alluvial miners were buried alive near the settlement of Wau and four others died in locations across Morobe and Madang provinces, Manning said. University of Goroka buildings were badly damaged and ‘there are reports of injuries to students on the campus and they have been admitted to hospital’, said Manning.

Missionary groups and private aviation firms have been trying to reach isolated communitie­s and airlift the injured to safety.

Aerial reconnaiss­ance by the Mission Aviation Fellowship indicated ‘visible slides in the Nankina area and that some are still actively slipping’, according to the UN’S Papua New Guinea Disaster Management Team.

Many people are feared to have been displaced but early on-the-ground assessment­s have been sketchy. Papua New Guinea Red Cross secretaryg­eneral Valachie Quagliata said the area’s rough mountainou­s terrain made access difficult, with the worst affected areas not accessible by car.

According to a UN assessment, the earthquake damaged the Ramu hydropower plant ‘resulting in a total system outage across the Highlands provinces, Madang, and Morobe’.

“There will be major interrupti­ons to power going forward,” Quagliata said.

An undersea cable linking the regional capital Madang to Port Moresby was also affected by the quake, as was a link between Madang and Sydney.

Parts of the vital Highlands Highway, which connects several of Papua New Guinea’s main cities, have been damaged.

However, regional airports in Goroka and Lae-nadzab remained open with no damage reported, according to the United Nations. Prime Minister James Marape has warned Papua New Guineans to be cautious after the ‘massive’ earthquake, but said its impact was expected to be less than a 2018 quake which killed 150 people.

The country’s national coronaviru­s hotline has been redirected to take calls from people affected by the earthquake.

The quake struck at a depth of 61km, about 67km from the town of Kainantu, according to the US Geological Survey. Papua New Guinea sits on the Pacific ‘Ring of Fire’, causing it to experience frequent earthquake­s.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Injured villagers are seen at a hospital in Lae after being evacuated by helicopter from Wauko Village following a 7.6-magnitude quake which struck off Papua New Guinea’s coast, on Sunday
(AFP) Injured villagers are seen at a hospital in Lae after being evacuated by helicopter from Wauko Village following a 7.6-magnitude quake which struck off Papua New Guinea’s coast, on Sunday

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