BY NURDIN HASAN
(AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)
Banda Aceh, TAG — A tsunami watch around the Indian Ocean was lifted
hours after two massive earthquakes struck off Indonesia's Sumatra island
Wednesday, sending terrified people fleeing from the coast.
(AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)
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The
8.6-magnitude quake hit 431 kilometers (268 miles) off the city of Banda Aceh
at 0838 GMT, and was followed by another undersea quake measured at 8.2, the US
Geological Survey said.
Panicky
residents poured into the streets of Banda Aceh, which was near the epicenter
of a 9.1-magnitude quake in 2004 that unleashed an Indian Ocean tsunami that
killed 220,000 people including 170,000 in Aceh province.
Wednesday's
quake was felt as far afield as Thailand, where skyscrapers in the capital
Bangkok swayed. India, Indonesia, Kenya, Malaysia, Reunion Island, Sri Lanka,
Thailand and Myanmar all issued alerts or evacuation orders which were later
lifted.
Waves
of up to 80 centimeters (31 inches) hit Indonesia's Aceh province, but there
were no reports of damage or casualties.
US
seismologists then cancelled the tsunami warning, saying the quakes had
generated only small waves and were nowhere near the scale of the disasters
that struck Asia in 2004 and Japan last year.
The
Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii said the threat of a tsunami has
"diminished or is over for most areas".
Earlier
in Banda Aceh, there were chaotic scenes as people grabbed their families and
raced through crowded streets, with motorbikes and cars jostling for space.
"There
are people trying to evacuate, some are praying and children at a school were
panicking as teachers tried to get them out," a resident in Banda Aceh
said.
"There
are traffic jams everywhere as people are trying to get away from the coast --
many are on motorcycles," he said, adding that telephone connections and
electricity were patchy.
Television
images showed hundreds gathering at a large mosque in Banda Aceh, many weeping
and searching for family members. Women and girls draped head-to-toe in white
were praying on mats laid out on the ground.
In
Sri Lanka the disaster management centre asked residents on the coast to move
inland to avoid being hit by any large waves. In the capital Colombo, nervous
crowds gathered on the streets.
"There
was a first jolt for five seconds, then a pause and then a really big one. It
was really frightening, the whole room was shaking," said 42-year-old
tourist Maria Teresa Pizarro from the Philippines.
"You
could hear the wood in the furniture cracking, the curtains were moving and the
ceiling fan was rattling. I just picked up the children and ran
downstairs," she said from the city's seafront Galle Face hotel.
Thailand
issued an evacuation order for its Andaman coast, a popular tourist
destination, and flights to the tourist island of Phuket were diverted to other
airports as passengers and staff were evacuated to higher ground.
A
small tsunami measuring just 10 centimeters (four inches) reached the coast
before Thailand, like other countries, lifted its warning.
"At
this point people can be relieved," said Somsak Khaosuwan, the director of
Thailand's National Disaster Warning Centre.
India
issued a red high-level tsunami warning for the Andaman and Nicobar Islands,
located in the Indian Ocean, and lower alerts for several other eastern coastal
states.
Tremors
were felt in the Indian eastern city of Kolkata, where cracks appeared in some
tall buildings. A large number of people rushed out of offices in the city's
central Park street area as windows and doors rattled.
In
the Maldives, where luxury resorts cater to well-heeled holiday makers, hotels
moved tourists away from beaches, with some even issuing guests with life
jackets as a precaution.
The
catastrophic tsunami of December 26, 2004, was generated by a 9.1-magnitude
earthquake that struck in the ocean about 200 kilometers away from Wednesday's
initial quake.
An
expert with the British Geological Survey said the tsunamis were small because
the quakes' movement was horizontal, not vertical, and caused no drop in the
sea floor, which is what triggers tsunamis.
"Although
an earthquake of this magnitude has the potential to cause a large tsunami...
we haven't seen any drop of the sea floor, which is what generates the
wave," seismologist Susanne Sargeant said.
Last
year, a 9.0-magnitude earthquake caused a tsunami and nuclear disaster in
Japan, killing some 19,000 people.
The latest Indonesian quakes occurred in a notoriously
seismic area, where the Indian tectonic plate descends into the Earth beneath
the Eurasian plate.[]
Tsunami Warnings Relaxed After Powerful Aceh Quakes
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
April 11, 2012
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