5.1 Quake kills eight, smashes buildings in Spain
05/12/2011 A
magnitude 5.1 quake killed at least eight people in southern Spain,
sending historic buildings crashing down as panicked residents fled.
Eight
people including one child perished in the southeastern city of Lorca
in the deadliest tremor in Spain in more than five decades, the regional
government of Murcia said in a statement.Another 167 were injured
including three in grave condition in hospital, health officials
reported.
The
quake collapsed the fronts of buildings and ripped open walls. Streets
were littered with crumbled buildings, chunks of masonry, fallen
terraces and crumpled cars.
A church clocktower tumbled and
smashed into pieces, narrowly missing a television reporter as he
conducted an interview on Spanish public broadcaster TVE. A bronze bell
lay in the rubble.
Fearful residents including families with
children gathered outside with blankets as night fell. About 10,000
people were evacuated from the cordoned-off city-centre.
In an outdoor basketball court and children's playground, dozens of people spent the night on the ground wrapped in blankets.
One
group of four evacuees sat in fold-up chairs in the early hours of
Thursday, unable to sleep. As they escaped their damaged building they
had seen the corpses of three people outside killed by falling bricks.
"I was scared to death," said one elderly woman who declined to give her name.
The
tremor struck at 6:47 pm (1647 GMT) with a depth of 10 kilometres (six
miles) and could be felt as far away as the capital Madrid. It hit
nearly two hours after a smaller 4.4-magnitude quake.
A doctor said many people had been hurt.
"I
had just finished attending to a patient. We all went out into the
streets and had to treat people, some with serious inuries, many
unconscious, because the ambulances could not reach them," the doctor,
identified only as Virtudes, told the online edition of El Pais.
"They just took away a man who had a wall fall on top of him."
Prime
Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero ordered military emergency units
in after being told of the disaster while he was in a meeting with King
Juan Carlos, the premier's office said in a statement.
The damage
was concentrated in the towns of Lorca and Totana, which lie in one of
the most active seismic zones of the Iberian peninsula, but also spread
as far as Albacete and Velez-Rubio in Almeria, the premier's office
said.
Train services were halted and emergency vehicles clogged roads to the city.
A
total 225 emergency military units deployed to the quake zone along
with another 400 safety workers including rescuers with search dogs, the
interior ministry said.
Police also sent in two specialized
trucks with floodlights and three helicopters including a Superpuma, the
ministry said. The Red Cross moved in 24 ambulances and set up three
field hospitals.
A total of 350 ambulances transferred 400 patients out of two of the town's hospitals, the regional government said.
Residents
described confusion in the town of 92,700 inhabitants about 70
kilometres (45 miles) southeast of Murcia. Lorca traces its history back
more than 2,000 years and boasts many medieval monuments.
Cristina
Selva, 32, said she was playing with her two two-year-old daughters.
"The building moved and I was was very scared for the girls. I took them
and the three of us got under the table to wait for it to pass," she
told El Pais.
"It was the longest 20 seconds of my life."
Francisco
Martinez, 61, was watching television on the fourth floor when the
building shook and he fled with his sister. "We don't know what the
damage is because we cannot get in," he said as he spent the night
sitting down outside.
It was the deadliest earthquake in Spain
since April 19, 1956 when a tremor wrecked buildings and killed 11
people in Albolote, a town in the southern Spanish province of Granada.
Ironically,
it struck on the same day many residents stayed away from work in the
Italian capital Rome fearing a supposed prophecy of a devastating tremor
by a self-taught Italian seismologist who died in 1979.
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