Strong
6 magnitude Iran quake near Strait of Hormuz kills child, causes
damage
11
May, 2013
TEHRAN:
A strong earthquake of 6.2 magnitude hit southern Iran early today,
killing one child and injuring at least 20 others in remote,
mountainous villages, state television reported.
The
US Geological Survey registered the quake at 0738 IST, measured at 85
kilometres (52 miles) southeast of the town of Minab, located in the
southern Hormuzgan province and off the Strait of Hormuz.
The
quake was registered at a depth of 36.44 kilometres (22.64 miles),
the USGS said.
A
local emergency official said a two-year-old died of serious
injuries. "The child passed away on route to hospital,"
Mohammad Shekari was quoted by the ISNA news agency.
Iran's
top quake rescue operations official, Mahmoud Mozafar, said at least
20 people had been injured.
Iran
sits astride several major fault lines and is prone to frequent
earthquakes, some of which have been devastating.
Head
of Iran's National Institute for Oceanography Vahid Chegini said
today's quake was unlikely to spark a tsunami in the Gulf or the Sea
of Oman.
"The
chances of a tsunami because of today's quake are remote as the quake
was inland," Chegini told the Mehr news agency.
Mozafar,
who heads Iran's Red Crescent rescue corps, said rescue teams were
dispatched to Hormuzgan's remote area hit by the quake.
Provincial
emergency chief Hossein Ranjbar told state television that some 70
villages had suffered severe damage in the quake, which according to
Iran's Seismological Centre was followed by a series of aftershocks,
measuring between 4.1 and 5.2.
Media
reports said electricity and telephone connection had been cut, while
rescue teams were attempting to open blocked roads to the quake-hit
areas.
Last
month, the biggest earthquake to hit the country in 50 years,
measuring 7.8 killed a woman and injured more than a dozen other
people in the southeast.
At
least 40 people were killed across the border in Pakistan where
hundreds of mud homes were levelled.
Putting
aside America's longstanding enmity with Iran and its more recent
strains in relations with Pakistan, US Secretary of State John Kerry
had offered condolences and assistance with relief work for last
month's quake.
Also
in April, another quake struck near Iran's Gulf port city of Bushehr,
killing at least 30 people.
The
UN's atomic agency said there was no damage to Iran's only and
Russian-built nuclear power plant at Bushehr. Iran said the plant
continued its operations as normal.
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