The Commercial Appeal

Trump had ‘informal’ conversati­on with Putin at G-20 summit dinner

- LOREN HOLMES/AP

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina – After avoiding Vladimir Putin for most of the day at the G-20 summit of global leaders, President Donald Trump had an “informal” conversati­on with the Russian president, the White House said Saturday.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the two spoke at a cultural dinner Friday night. Sanders did not say what was discussed.

Dozens of temblors shook parts of Alaska on Saturday as officials in Anchorage continued recovery efforts after experienci­ng the most significan­t earthquake to impact the state’s biggest city in decades.

No deaths or serious injuries were reported in Friday’s magnitude 7.0 earthquake, but the Anchorage area suffered damage from the quake that sliced open roads, knocked out power and damaged buildings.

Anchorage utility companies were scrambling to restore power to about 30,000 customers.

Enstar Natural Gas Company said it was dispatchin­g additional workers from its Michigan affiliate to help with recovery and assist the company as it goes about surveying 3,488 miles of pipeline for leaks.

Gov. Bill Walker, who is set to leave office Monday, said it will take take weeks to repair roadways damaged by the earthquake.

“This is much more significan­t than that,” said Walker, who issued a state disaster declaratio­n.

Walker said members of the staff governor-elect, Mike Dunleavy, were already involved in the earthquake response.

President Trump on Friday also issued an emergency declaratio­n for Alaska, which paves the way for federal agencies to help with relief efforts in the area.

Alaska averages an earthquake about every 12 minutes, with more large quakes than the other 49 states combined. The vast majority of the quakes “are tiny pops and creaks in the earth,” Alaska state seismologi­st Mike West said.

Anchorage has been hit hard before. A 1964 earthquake that registered 9.2, the largest ever in the U.S. and the second-largest ever recorded, caused extensive damage to the city and resulted in 129 deaths.

West said Friday’s earthquake was the “most significan­t” to strike Anchorage since the 1964 quake.

“There is quite a bit of damage across Anchorage,” West said in a Facebook Live interview. “I’m not aware of largescale building collapses, but I think it’s safe to say there are thousands of homes and businesses and buildings that were damaged in some fashion, be it a deck that slid downhill, a cracked foundation, a gas line disconnect­ed from the house.”

The U.S. Geological Survey said that aftershock­s are expected to continue for some time.

The big quake struck 7 miles north of Anchorage, a city of about 300,000, about 30 miles undergroun­d.

While Alaskans are accustomed to earthquake­s, Friday’s temblor was emotionall­y jarring.

Brenekia Horne of Muldoon, a major neighborho­od on the east side of Anchorage, said as the earth shook Friday morning she thought the end had come.

“Death instantly crossed my mind and I started praying,” said Horne, 24. She said she was dropping her son at day care when the earthquake hit. “I was having a conversati­on with my son’s babysitter when it hit, mid-conversati­on. At first, I froze. The house started shaking, all the decoration­s fell off the wall, and the TV tipped over.”

 ??  ?? Marty Thurman inspects a crack in the road at the Internatio­nal Airport Road offramp caused by the earthquake in Anchorage, Alaska, on Friday. No deaths or major building collapses were reported from the temblor.
Marty Thurman inspects a crack in the road at the Internatio­nal Airport Road offramp caused by the earthquake in Anchorage, Alaska, on Friday. No deaths or major building collapses were reported from the temblor.

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