Earthquake claims 65 lives in New Zealand
Feb. 22: At least 65 people were killed as a 6.3-magnitude earthquake struck New Zealand’s southern city of Christchurch early on Tuesday, crushing buildings and leaving hundreds of people trapped and screaming for help.
“The death toll I have at the moment is 65 and that may rise. So it is an absolute tragedy for this city, for New Zealand and for the people that we care so much about,” the New Zealand Prime Minister, Mr John Key, said. “It’s a terrifying time for the people of Canterbury. We may be witnessing New Zealand’s darkest day,” he said and described Christchurch — the nation’s second-largest city — as “a scene of utter devastation.”
Dozens were trapped under flattened buildings in the country’s most devastating tremor in 80 years. The widespread damage came from a lunch-time tremor in the city of about 4 lakh residents which is still recovering from a powerful quake in September last year. However, that quake did not cause any fatalities but did weaken many buildings.
Live video footage showed parts of buildings collapsed into the streets, which were strewn with bricks and shattered concrete. Footpaths and roads were cracked and split, and hundreds of dazed, screaming and crying residents wandered through the streets. The TV footage showed onlookers clinging to each other and others bleeding and limping.
Local police said that there were multiple fatalities in the city, including an accident in which two buses had been crushed by falling buildings. Christchurch airport was temporarily closed and police said they were evacuating the city centre as building frontages collapsed, with witnesses saying, there were people trapped inside.
Eye-witnesses said rescue helicopters were pressed into service to lift survivors to safety from the rooftops of buildings where staircases had collapsed, and emergency workers used giant cranes to pull office workers out of ruined city buildings. “We had everything on our side in the last earthquake ...we’re the polar opposite this time,” the Prime Minister said.
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