Death toll rises to 5, 1,000 houses destroyed by powerful earthquake of 6.9 on the Richter Scale that struck northern Papua New Guinea yesterday Sunday, 24/3/2024
East Sepik provincial police chief Christopher Tamari said the death toll might be “higher”.
The governor of the province, Alan Baird, spoke of “regarding 1,000 homes lost”, adding that rescue services were still “gauging the effects” of the earthquakes which “caused damage” to almost the entire province.
Dozens of villages located on the banks of the Sepik River had been affected by severe flooding before the earthquake struck early yesterday morning.
Photos taken following the earthquake show wooden houses giving way under the mud, which has reached regarding half a meter.
Tragedy strikes as Papua New Guinea earthquake claims five lives and obliterates 1,000 homes
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Earthquakes are common in Papua New Guinea, which sits at the top of the seismic “Ring of Fire,” an arc of major tectonic activity that stretches across southeast Asia and into the Pacific Ocean basin.
Although they rarely cause significant damage to the sparsely populated jungle plateaus, earthquakes can trigger devastating landslides.
The majority of the island nation’s nine million people live outside major cities, where the topography and lack of paved roads can greatly hamper search and rescue efforts.
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