Strong earthquake shakes buildings across South Asia

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April 10, 2016

KABUL, AFGHANISTAN – An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.6 struck South Asia on Sunday, shaking buildings in Pakistan, Afghanistan and India, witnesses and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said, and injuring several people in at least one Pakistani city.

April 10, 2016

KABUL, AFGHANISTAN – An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.6 struck South Asia on Sunday, shaking buildings in Pakistan, Afghanistan and India, witnesses and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) said, and injuring several people in at least one Pakistani city.

Kashmiris look at a residential house which was damaged after a powerful earthquake that shook Indian administered Kashmir and northern Afghanistan, with tremors felt as widely as Pakistan and northern India, on April 10, 2016 in Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian administered Kashmir, India.

The magnitude 6.8 quake was centered in the mountainous Hindu Kush region, the US Geological Survey reported. In October 2015, a magnitude-7.5 quake in the same border area killed close to 300 people.

The USGS said the quake was centered about 40 km (25 miles) west of Ashkasham in remote northeastern Afghanistan, close to the border with Tajikistan and just across a narrow finger of land from Pakistan's northwestern Chitral province. It was measured at a depth of 210 km (130 miles).

Residents left their homes in Kabul and Islamabad when the quake struck, with buildings swaying for more than a minute in both capitals. Similar reports were received from across northern and central Pakistan.

In Pakistan's northwestern frontier city of Peshawar, Khalid Khan, emergency director at the city's main Lady Reading Hospital, said three people were treated for "multiple injuries." Media pictures showed two children who appeared to have been injured in the quake.

People in Lahore in Pakistan's east, 630 km (390 miles) from the epicenter, also reported they had felt the tremors.

A Reuters witness in Chitral said the tremor was strong but there was no major damage visible.

A 7.5-magnitude quake struck the area on Oct. 26 last year, killing more than 300 people and destroying thousands of homes.

In Kabul, Omar Mohammadi, a spokesman for the Afghanistan National Disaster Management Authority, said officials were collecting information but no reports of casualties or damage had been received so far.

Tremors were also felt in the Indian capital and in Kashmir, witnesses said, with some people working in high-rise buildings in the Indian capital rushing into the streets.

The Delhi underground system was also halted briefly, commuters told the NDTV channel.

The Hindu Kush area bordering Pakistan and Afghanistan is a seismically active area, with quakes often felt across the region. Just over a decade ago, a 7.6-magnitude quake in another part of northern Pakistan killed about 75,000 people.


Courtesy: Reuters