At least five people were killed
and 1 million evacuated from affected areas, when a powerful
8.3-magnitude earthquake struck Chile Wednesday, the director of the
National Office of Emergency for the Chilean Ministry of Interior,
Ricardo Toro, announced at a Santiago news conference early Thursday
morning.
[Breaking news alert, posted at 10:53 p.m. ET Wednesday]
At
least three people were killed when a powerful earthquake struck Chile
on Wednesday, President Michelle Bachelet said. The victims included a
35-year-old woman who was killed by a falling roof, a 20-year-old woman
who was killed by falling rocks and a man in his 80s who had a heart
attack, Bachelet said.
[Previous story, posted at 10:24 p.m. ET Wednesday]
A powerful 8.3-magnitude earthquake struck off Chile's coast on Wednesday, triggering a tsunami alert and coastal evacuations.
A woman was killed in the city of Illapel, Chilean National Police spokesman Oscar Llanten told CNN sister network CNN Chile. At least seven people were injured in the quake, he said, three of whom are in serious condition.
There were also reports of damages to homes in Illapel, Interior Minister Jorge Burgos told reporters.
According to a preliminary assessment from the U.S. Geological Survey,
the quake's epicenter was about 54 kilometers (34 miles) west of
Illapel. It occurred around 7:54 p.m. (6:54 p.m. ET) and had a depth of
33 kilometers (20.5 miles), USGS said.
Chile's national emergency agency issued a tsunami alert, ordering evacuations in coastal areas from Arica to Puerto Aysen.
Flooding, power loss
Large
tsunami waves have been observed along the Chilean coast, near the
quake's epicenter. In Coquimbo, Chile, a wave was measured at more than
15 feet, according to the U.S. National Tsunami Warning center.
Pictures
taken inside a shopping mall in La Serena, in the coastal city just
north of Coquimbo, showed walls and signs toppled to the floor, ceiling
tiles caved in as well as chairs, benches and tables covered in rubble.
Coquimbo Mayor
Cristian Galleguillos told CNN Chile the city was starting to see
flooding and 95% of the city had lost electrical power. Residents had
evacuated before waves started hitting the coastline, he said.
At
least 12 aftershocks of magnitude 4.9 or higher rattled residents in
the area around the first quake's epicenter within less than two hours,
according to USGS.
A series of
aftershocks could be felt in the country's capital, about 230
kilometers (145 miles) away from the quake's epicenter, CNN Chile reported.
"Everybody
ran outside. The windows rattled. Things fell. ... The impact was
strong," said Emily Hersh, who lives in Santiago. "Even after I stepped
outside, I felt the ground moving."
Fabrizio
Guzman, emergency communications manager in Chile for World Vision,
said the the earthquake hit during rush hour, causing traffic snarls
that left many people stuck in the streets as they tried to get home.
"There
were many people afraid, running in the streets, when the shaking
started," he said in a written statement. "The earthquake felt really
intense and seemed to last for several minutes."
Tsunami watch
"Widespread hazardous tsunami waves are possible" along the coast of Chile and Peru, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said, and a tsunami watch is in effect for Hawaii.
A
tsunami watch is issued "to alert emergency management officials and
the public of an event which may later impact the watch area," the
center says. A warning is issued when a "potential tsunami with
significant widespread inundation is imminent or expected."
Even New Zealand, which is some 6,000 miles away from the quake's epicenter, is on guard for possible tsunami waves.
The
country has issued a tsunami warning. Shane Bayley of New Zealand's
Ministry of Civil Defence and Emergency Management told CNN strong tidal
currents and large waves are expected in some areas.
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