Skip to main content

At least 214 people dead in Iran-Iraq earthquake

At least 214 people have been killed and more than 2,500 injured in Iran after a magnitude 7.3 earthquake struck near the border between Iran and Iraq.
The earthquake was centred about 19 miles outside the eastern Iraqi city of Halabja at about 6.20pm UK time on Sunday.

It was just 15 miles deep and was felt for about 20 seconds in Baghdad and was also felt in Turkey, Kuwait and Israel.

The tremor killed 207 people and injured more than 2,500 in Iran alone.

At least seven deaths were reported in neighbouring Iraq with 321 people hurt, authorities said.

The quake triggered landslides in the mountainous region along the Iran-Iraq border, also destroying buildings, shattering windows and sending people running for safety.

TV reports indicate that more than half the Iranian casualties are from the town of Sarpol-e-Zahab, and the district of Ezgeleh, which have a combined population of 30,000. The area, about ten miles from the border with Iraq, is in the Kermanshah province.

Its governor told state TV: "There are still people under the rubble.

"We hope the number of dead and injured won't rise too much, but it will rise".

At least three emergency relief camps have been set up after the only hospital in Sarpol-e-Zahab was badly damaged in the quake.

Head of emergency medical services Pirhossein Koulivand said it was "difficult to send rescue teams to the villages because the roads have been cut off - there have been landslides".

There have also been a number of aftershocks felt and electricity has been cut in several Iranian and Iraqi cities.

Nevertheless, dozens of rescue teams are searching for survivors in larger towns and Red Cross teams are on their way.

In Iraq, the most extensive damage was seen in the town of Darbandikhan, which is in the Kurdish region and around 47 miles east of the city of Sulaymaniyah, where more than 30 people were injured.

Local health minister Rekawt Rasheed said the situation was "critical", made worse by the fact that the district's main hospital was badly damaged and without power.

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei offered his condolences and urged rescuers and government agencies to do all they can to help those affected by the quake.

The region has regular earthquakes and last night's struck along a 930-mile fault line between the Arabian and Eurasian tectonic plates, which runs through western Iran and into Iraq's north east.

One of the region's worst quakes struck Bam in Iran in 2003 and killed at least 31,000 people.

There have been two major quakes since then - in 2005 more than 600 people were killed and in 2012 around 300 died.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Subscribe to my youtube channel

Tiktok Youtube

Osun: Police arrest civil servant, filmmaker over alleged rape of teenager

  The Osun Police Command has arrested a teacher, Gbenga Samson Ayenioye and his friend, a theatre practitioner, Tunde AmokeOja, for allegedly raping a 16-year-old girl (name withheld) who is said to be one of his students. The civil servant and his friend, Amokeoja were arrested for allegedly raping the teenager on different occasions. It was gathered that Ayenioye, who was a Financial Accounting teacher at Osogbo Grammar School, invited the girl; his students, to a relaxation centre at Latona area in Osogbo on Sunday, February 16, 2020. Ayenioye, a married man, in his early 40s, was said to have allegedly forced the girl to bed and later introduced her to his friend, AmokeOja, a theatre practitioner on the promise that he would assist in developing her film acting skills in order to be able to raise funds for her WAEC fee. Ayenioye has been recently transferred from the school to the State Ministry of Education. On February 18, 2020, AmokeOja, a film production mana...

EKITI ASSEMBLY APPROVES DEATH PENALTY FOR CULTISTS

A bill seeking to prohibit the activities of secret cults scaled third reading at the Ekiti State House of Assembly on Tuesday. The substance of the bill is the prescription of the death penalty for those found guilty of breaching the law in that regard. Persons found guilty of aiding and abetting cultism would also bag life imprisonment. All that is left is for it to be signed into law by the governor. The new provision was an amendment to the law against cultism, enacted by Ayo Fayose during his first tenure as governor of the state. The law had provided a seven-year imprisonment for anyone convicted of cult activities, whereas those aiding and abetting the act were to be imprisoned for five years. The bill titled, 'Secret Cult (Abolition and Prohibition) [Amendment] Bill, 2017,' gained the lawmakers' attention following increase in cult activities at the Ekiti State University, Ado Ekiti which led to the killing of students recently. Before the passage, t...