Morocco Earthquake Toll growing...

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senorpepr
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Morocco Earthquake Toll growing...

#1 Postby senorpepr » Tue Feb 24, 2004 10:04 am

A powerful earthquake struck northern Morocco early Tuesday, toppling houses and killing at least 300 people, local authorities said. Many of the victims were women, children, and the elderly.

The quake shook rural areas near the Mediterranean city of Al Hoceima, and there was deep concern about three outlying villages — Ait Kamra, Tamassint and Imzourn — where 30,000 people live in mud structures unable to withstand such an earthquake.

The quake struck at 2:27 a.m. when most people would have been asleep.

"If we take into account the 140 people already killed in Al Kamra, we believe that the toll will rise to more than 300," a spokesman for village authorities told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the 6.5-magnitude quake was centered 100 miles northeast of Fez, about a mile below the Mediterranean Sea bed.

The death toll climbed steadily throughout the day as rescuers reached hard-hit areas. Military and civilian rescuers were dispatched to help survivors and search for victims trapped under rubble, while helicopters filled with emergency supplies were preparing for takeoff.

However, rescuers reported difficulties in reaching the affected area, located in the foothills of the Rif Mountains and served by bad roads.

A 4.1-magnitude aftershock hit near Al Hoceima at 11:04 a.m., according to the official MAP news agency. It quoted the geophysical laboratory of the National Scientific and Technical Research Center.

A physician at Mohammed V hospital in Al-Hoceima told French television station LCI that there were "many deaths and many injured."

"Most of the injured have broken bones," he said. "Houses collapsed. It was a very, very violent jolt."

Another physician at the hospital told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity that hundreds of people were injured and that he expected the death toll to go to at least 200.

Al-Hoceima is the largest city in northern Morocco and is populated by Berbers. The region suffers from extreme poverty and underdevelopment and has been neglected by the government for decades following a rebellion in 1960.

The local economy is sustained by fishing and by farmers who grow cannabis.

U.S. Geological Survey spokesman Butch Kinerney said the earthquake's strength and depth could lead to damage along the coasts. He said the quake would likely be felt up to 200 miles away in Algeria.

The quake — which reverberated across the Strait of Gibraltar — was felt across much of southern Spain, but no damage or injuries were reported. News reports said it was most noticed in tall apartment blocks of southern Andalucia and southeast Murcia. The quake was also felt in the Spanish North African enclave of Melilla.

An unrelated temblor Monday evening shook the Alps region in southeast France. No injuries or damage were reported.

The last large earthquake to hit the area measured 6.0 and struck in 1994. But Morocco's deadliest earthquake was in 1960, when 15,000 people were killed after a devastating quake shook the southern city of Agadir and surrounding regions.

The last time a major earthquake battered North Africa was on May 21, 2003, when more than 2,200 people were killed and 10,000 injured after a temblor devastated northern Algeria.
Last edited by senorpepr on Wed Feb 25, 2004 10:34 am, edited 1 time in total.
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#2 Postby senorpepr » Wed Feb 25, 2004 10:33 am

The death toll from a powerful earthquake in northern Morocco has risen to at least 564, but rescuers are keeping up a frantic search for survivors under the rubble of devastated mud-brick homes.

Hundreds of other people are reported injured in and around the Mediterranean port city of Al Hoceima after the quake, measuring 6.5 on the Richter scale, struck yesterday as many people were sleeping.

"The death toll has risen to 564," Health Minister Mohamed Cheikh Biadillah told state television 2M.
Dozens of aftershocks and rain have made relief efforts even more difficult in outlying villages in the foothills of the Rif mountains.

"It's a total disaster, the world needs to help us," Hassan Hmidouch, head of the town council in the village of Im-Zouren, told Reuters Television.

Residents, some digging with their bare hands or shovels to search for survivors, says heavy equipment and sniffer dogs are needed.

"They sent the military which basically ordered us to stop digging, but they couldn't do much themselves for lack of equipment," said Abdelkhalek, a teacher who did not want to give his full name.

In his village of Ait Kamara, 18 kilometers to the south of Al Hoceima, many houses were flattened like cardboard boxes.

His parents, three brothers and one sister were killed when their home was reduced to rubble in the nearby hamlet of Ait Abdelaziz, where he said 70 per cent of houses were destroyed.

In Al Hoceima, a fishing port and beach resort of about 70,000 inhabitants, damage was limited but authorities struggled to deal with the dead, injured and homeless from nearby areas.

"As soon as we think we've seen all the dead and injured, more keep coming in ambulances," said a doctor at the main Mohammed V hospital.

Many of the injured were being treated in army barracks, health centers and charity homes.
Others were flown to the capital Rabat, Casablanca and Meknes.
North Africa's last major earthquake hit neighboring Algeria last May. It measured 6.8 on the Richter scale and killed 2,300 people near the capital Algiers.

Josephine Shields, an official with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) in Tunis, says six villages within 15 kilometers of Al Hoceima had been hit by Tuesday's quake.

"We've been told that the entire affected area has between 300,000 and 400,000 people. It is a remote area, very mountainous, so it is a bit difficult to access."

Morocco's state MAP news agency says King Mohammed, whose country of some 30 million people is a constitutional monarchy, plans to visit the disaster area.
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