Iran quake survivors spend second night in the open air
Iran quake survivors spend second night
in the open air
Tens of thousands of Iranians spent a second night in the open air after a
7.3-magnitude quake struck near the border with Iraq, killing more than 400.
People who had
fled their homes when the quake rocked the mountainous region spanning Iran's
western province of Kermanshah and Iraqi Kurdistan on Sunday evening, braved
chilly temperatures as authorities struggled to get aid into the quake zone.
Iran has
declared Tuesday a national day of mourning as officials outlined the most
pressing priorities and described the levels of destruction in some parts as
"total". "People's immediate needs are firstly tents, water and
food," said the head of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards, Major General
Mohammad Ali Jafari.
"Newly
constructed buildings... held up well, but the old houses built with earth were
totally destroyed," he told state television during a visit to the
affected region.
The toll in Iran
stood at 413 dead and 6,700 injured, while across the border in more sparsely
populated areas of Iraq, the health ministry said eight people had died and
several hundred were injured. Iraq's Red Crescent put the toll at nine dead.
AFP, like other
foreign media organisations, has not been allowed to visit the scene of the
disaster. Officials said they were setting up relief camps for the displaced
and that 22,000 tents, 52,000 blankets and tonnes of food and water had been
distributed. The official IRNA news agency said 30 Red Crescent teams had been
sent to the area.
Hundreds of
ambulances and dozens of army helicopters were reported to have joined the
rescue effort after Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ordered the
government and armed forces to mobilise "all their means".
By late Monday,
officials said all the roads in Kermanshah province had been re-opened,
although the worst-affected town of Sar-e Pol-e Zahab remained without
electricity, said state television. At least 280 people were killed in the
town, home to some 85,000 people. Buildings stood disfigured, their former
facades now rubble on crumpled vehicles.
- Totally
destroyed -
The tremor shook
several western Iranian cities including Tabriz and was also felt in
southeastern Turkey, an AFP correspondent said. In the town of Diyarbakir,
residents were reported to have fled their homes.
Several villages
were totally destroyed in Iran's Dalahoo County, the Tasnim news agency
reported. Five historical monuments in Kermanshah suffered minor damage, but
the UNESCO-listed Behistun inscription from the seventh century BC was not
affected, the ISNA agency said.
Nizar Abdullah
spent Sunday night with neighbours sifting through the ruins of a two-storey
home next door after it crumbled into concrete debris.
"There were
eight people inside," the 34-year-old Iraqi Kurd said. Some family members
managed to escape, but "neighbours and rescue workers pulled out the
mother and one of the children dead from the rubble".
The quake, which
struck at a relatively shallow depth of 23 kilometres, was felt for about 20
seconds in Baghdad, and for longer in other provinces of Iraq, AFP journalists
said.
It struck along
a 1,500-kilometre fault line between the Arabian and Eurasian tectonic plates,
which extends through western Iran and northeastern Iraq.
The area sees
frequent seismic activity. In 1990, a 7.4-magnitude quake in northern Iran
killed 40,000 people, injured 300,000 and left half a million homeless,
reducing dozens of towns and nearly 2,000 villages to rubble.
Thirteen years
later, a catastrophic quake flattened swathes of the ancient southeastern
Iranian city of Bam, killing at least 31,000. Iran has experienced at least two
major quake disasters since, one in 2005 that killed more than 600 and another
in 2012 that left some 300 dead.
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