Rabu, 11 Agustus 2010

Vanuatu tsunami warning drives residents to higher ground

Vanuatu tsunami warning drives residents to higher ground

Vanuatu tsunami fears following a powerful earthquake panicked residents on Tuesday. The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center reported a 9-inch wave.

This photo taken on August 6, shows Mt Yasur - the most active of Vanuatu's nine volcanoes - roaring to life on Tanna island. A major 7.6-magnitude earthquake rocked the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu on August 10, Australian scientists said, but no widespread Vanuatu tsunami warning was issued.

Torsten Blackwood/AFP/Newscom

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By Kristen Gelineau, Associated Press / August 10, 2010

SYDNEY

Panicked residents of Vanuatu raced for higher ground after a powerful earthquake rattled the South Pacific island nation and generated a small tsunami on Tuesday.

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The 9-inch (22 centimeter) wave was observed off the capital Port Vila, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said. Police said there were no immediate reports of major damage or injuries from the wave or the 7.5 magnitude quake that preceded it, though buildings shook and power lines were down.

"It was quite a significant earthquake, and we're still having a few aftershocks," Ben McKenzie of the New Zealand High Commission told The Associated Press by phone from Port Vila.

The quake hit about 25 miles (40 kilometers) northwest of Port Vila at a depth of 22 miles (35 kilometers), the U.S. Geological Survey said.

Police spokesman John Frat told the AP that officials had not received any reports of injuries or major damage, but described the temblor as "a very sharp quake — it was the worst I have felt in my life."

"Many people left the center of town and went to higher places, fearing a tsunami," he said by telephone from Port Vila. "We're still experiencing sharp aftershocks and all communications were lost for a time, but things are coming back to normal now."

The four-story office building housing the New Zealand High Commission suffered some damage, said McKenzie, first secretary at the New Zealand diplomatic post. Office shelves and ceiling tiles fell down and computers were "thrown across the office" by the jolt, he said.

"We're trying to ensure everybody is safe and we're evacuating the building" to check that it's not "structurally damaged," he said.

Joel Pari, a worker at Port Vila's Trading Post newspaper, said they had not heard any reports of injury or major damage following the quake.

"But it was really strong — it really shook the buildings and everybody fled outside and to higher ground in case of a tsunami," he said.

Roland Cowles, manager of Sunset Bungalows waterfront resort at Port Vila, said his wife Jenny suffered minor cuts as she fled a supermarket.

"For a good 10 seconds, you almost couldn't walk — it was throwing you around that much and people in the supermarket had to be evacuated because of all of the damage that was being done," he told Ten Network television news in Australia by telephone.

Vanuatu is part of the Pacific "ring of fire" — an arc of earthquake and volcanic zones stretching from Chile in South America through Alaska and down through the South Pacific.

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