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Albania devastated by earthquake

Rescue crews searched for survivors as the death toll climbed to 21, with more than 600 people injured.

- By Llazar Semini and Visar Kryeziu

DURRES, Albania — Rescue crews with excavators searched for survivors trapped in toppled apartment buildings and hotels Tuesday as the death toll from a powerful predawn earthquake in Albania climbed to 21, with more than 600 people injured.

The magnitude 6.4 quake was felt across the southern Balkans and was followed by multiple aftershock­s, with several above magnitude 5. In nearby Bosnia, another temblor with a preliminar­y magnitude of 5.4 struck southeast of the capital Sarajevo, causing only minor damage.

The quake in Albania knocked down apartment buildings and hotels while people slept, and rescue crews worked into the evening to free more people believed trapped. There was no indication as to how many might still be buried in the rubble, as neighborin­g countries and European Union nations sent searchand-rescue crews to help.

The government declared an official day of mourning for Wednesday, with Albanian flags on official buildings to fly at halfstaff. Schools would remain closed until Monday, as Thursday and Friday were national holidays. The country’s soccer federation announced all matches would be canceled for the rest of the week.

Local television stations showed footage in the early hours after the quake of a young boy being rescued from a collapsed building in the coastal town of Durres, 20 miles west of the capital Tirana and one of the worst-hit areas. An excavator moved a broken slab of concrete and the boy cried and shouted in pain as local men pulled mangled reinforcem­ent bars out of the way trying to try to free his leg from the rubble.

Hours later, live TV footage showed people cheering as another child was found alive in a collapsed building in Durres where a body had been located earlier. In total, 43 people had been rescued from the rubble of buildings by Tuesday evening.

Health Minister Ogerta Manastirli­u said more than 600 people had been treated for injuries, including nine hospitaliz­ed with life-threatenin­g injuries.

“It is a dramatic moment where we should preserve calm, (and) stay alongside each other to cope with this shock,” Prime Minister Edi Rama said. He later visited Durres, where 12 people died, and the northern town of Thumane, where another seven people were killed by a collapsing apartment building. One person died after jumping from his home to escape in Kurbin, 30 miles north of Tirana, while another was killed on a road that collapsed in the northern town of Lezha.

In total, at least three hotels, a residentia­l villa and an apartment building collapsed in Durres, and one apartment building in Thumane.

In Thumane, one woman cried and begged Rama to help find her missing daughter-in-law. Rama embraced the woman and tried to console her.

In Durres, the Albanian prime minister was accompanie­d by Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias, who had been visiting neighborin­g North Macedonia earlier in the day.

“We have been through this, we know this, we will do whatever we can to help,” said Dendias, whose country is also in a highly seismicall­y active region and was among more than a dozen countries sending search-and-rescue teams to Albania.

Defense Minister Olta Xhacka said the searchand-rescue efforts were “extremely difficult operations, where you have to work slowly because there is a high risk of further collapse, endangerin­g not only residents, but also those trapped, and the rescuers themselves.”

About 400 soldiers set up some 200 tents in Durres and in Fushe Kruje near Thumane in the north to house survivors left homeless by the quake.

As night fell, hundreds of people were taking shelter in the tents, while others were traveling to relatives living in other parts of Albania that had not been affected.

 ?? GENT SHKULLAKU/GETTU-AFP ?? Emergency workers look for survivors in a building’s rubble in Durres, Albania, after a predawn quake hit Tuesday.
GENT SHKULLAKU/GETTU-AFP Emergency workers look for survivors in a building’s rubble in Durres, Albania, after a predawn quake hit Tuesday.

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