The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Strong aftershocks test nerves on Greek island
Crews of KOS, GREECE — experts began examining the damage to cultural monuments and infrastructure on the eastern Greek island of Kos on Saturday, a day after a powerful earthquake killed two tourists and injured nearly 500 people in the Aegean Sea region that stretches to Turkey’s sprawling coast.
Residents and tourists were still jittery as a series of aftershocks Saturday night continued to rock the island. A tremor measuring a prelim
inary 4.4 magnitude struck at 8:09 p.m. Saturday, send
ing residents and restaurant customers scurrying toward the middle of the town’s main square, as far away as possible from buildings.
Sixteen minutes later, a second 4.6-magnitude tremor struck, the Athens Geodynamics Institute reported. The first tremor had its epicenter only 12.5 miles northeast of Kos at a
depth of 6.2 miles. Hundreds of residents and tourists spent Friday night sleeping outdoors on the island, too afraid to return to their homes or hotels after
the quake that struck early Friday. Many camped out in parks and olive groves, or slept in their cars or on beach and swimming pool lounge chairs.
The aftershocks Saturday night meant that many would spend a second night outdoors.
During the day in Kos, churches, an old mosque,
the port’s 14th-century castle and other old buildings that suffered in the quake were being checked by archae
ologists and experts from Greece’s Culture Ministry.
The U.S. Geological Survey measured the quake Friday at magnitude 6.7, with Greek and Turkish estimates a fraction lower. Two men, a Turk and a Swede, were killed when a wall collapsed into a popular bar in the Old Town of Kos.
The most seriously injured in Greece were airlifted to hos
pitals on the mainland and the southern island of Crete,
and at least two were still in critical condition Saturday.
The Turkish man’s parents were on the island making arrangements to repatriate his body home by boat, possibly on Sunday.
Panagiotis Bekali, a 30-yearold resident, spent the night sleeping in an olive grove with relatives while his 5-year-old son and 16-year-old nephew slept in the family car.
“There were cracks in the house (from the earthquake) so we went straight out,” he said. “We were afraid to stay indoors, so the whole family slept outside.”
Dozens of aftershocks have shaken the island.
About 350 of the injuries occurred in Turkey, in Bodrum and other beach resorts, as people fled buildings and as a sea swell flung cars off the road and pushed boats ashore. Seismologists said the shallow depth of the undersea quake Friday was to blame for the damage.
In Kos, the quake damaged the island’s main port, so ferries were being diverted to the smaller port of Kefalos on the island’s southwestern coast.