Bangkok Post

Damage assessment begins after quake

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Engineers in central Greece were yesterday assessing the damage from a strong 6.3 magnitude quake that injured at least 11 people, damaged scores of buildings and spread panic.

The recovery work began as scores of people from the villages of Damasi and Mesochori, some 240 kilometres north of Athens, spent the night away from their homes after Wednesday’s quake.

Civil protection officials said tents had been set up at a local stadium for temporary accommodat­ion, in addition to five hotels in the nearby town of Trikala and the main city of Larissa.

Repeated aftershock­s have struck the area, including a strong 5.2 magnitude tremor on Wednesday evening.

Crews inspected schools, hospitals and other vital public buildings in the area, in addition to homes, state news agency ANA said, adding that schools were closed on Thursday.

On Wednesday, the local governor said at least a hundred homes and other buildings in the broader area, including churches, had been damaged.

Emergency services said 11 people had been injured.

An elderly disabled man in Mesochori had a narrow escape when an entire side of his house collapsed, and over 60 children at the Damasi school, built over 80 years ago, were able to leave the building unharmed.

The state ambulance service said it had given assistance to 10 slightly injured people.

In the main city of Larissa, a 55-yearold man was hospitalis­ed with head injuries after being hit by falling masonry, a local hospital supervisor said.

The culture ministry said four churches, including one dating back to the 17th century, had been damaged.

The US Geological Survey said Wednesday’s 12.16pm quake (local time), which was felt across mainland Greece, was of 6.3 magnitude.

According to the Athens observator­y, the epicentre was 16 kilometres south of the town of Elassona and 8km deep.

Experts have stressed that fault lines in the area rarely produce tremors larger than the one registered on Wednesday.

Greece is located on a number of fault lines, and is sporadical­ly hit by earthquake­s. But they mostly occur at sea and do not cause casualties.

In October, a 7.0 magnitude quake struck in the Aegean Sea between the Greek island of Samos and the city of Izmir in western Turkey. Two teenagers died on Samos when a building collapsed.

 ?? AFP ?? An army helicopter flies over collapsed buildings near the town of Tyrnavos, after a strong quake hit the Greek central region of Thessaly.
AFP An army helicopter flies over collapsed buildings near the town of Tyrnavos, after a strong quake hit the Greek central region of Thessaly.

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