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At Least 35 Killed And Many Injured in Turkey Quake
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| An elderly Turkish couple sit outside their damaged house in Bolvadin |
ANKARA, Feb. 3 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - An earthquake registering 6.0 on the Richter scale struck western Turkey, with latest news agency reports saying that at least 35 people have been killed and over a hundred injured.
The quake centered on the town of Bolvadin in Afyon province, and was felt as far away as Istanbul, 500 kilometers (300 miles) to the northwest.
There was widespread panic as the quake hit, and some people threw themselves from windows and balconies, BBC's online news service reported. Television reports say that at least 150 people have been injured and a number of buildings have collapsed, trapping the people inside.
A French seismic center in Strasbourg reported that a second, stronger quake had struck western Turkey hours after the first. However, Ahmet Mete Isikara, head of the Istanbul-based Kandilli Observatory, said that, of the eight aftershocks that followed the initial quake, the strongest measured 5.3 on the Richter scale. The Sultandagi and Cay districts of Afyon were reported to have been among the worst hit areas.
Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit traveled to Sultandagi to inspect the damage. Reports said that at least 15 people have died there.
The Mayor of Afyon, Hayrettin Barut, said rescue workers were trying to reach eight people buried under a collapsed house.
The minarets of four mosques are said to have collapsed.
Authorities in Bolvadin broadcast warnings to residents over loudspeakers, urging them to stay out of damaged buildings. A local hospital took patients into the garden in case of any aftershocks.
The earthquake struck at about 0911 (0711 GMT) Sunday. In the province of Konya, one person was reported to have died of a heart attack and seven people were injured jumping from windows and balconies.
The Turkish government, which was criticized for reacting too slowly after devastating quakes in 1999, quickly set up a crisis management center in its foreign ministry.
Public Works Minister Abdulkadir Akcan said the government was sending 3,000 blankets and 1,000 tents to the region. However, he said the loss of life could have been much worse. "Because today is Sunday and shops are closed, a huge disaster was prevented."
Greece, which historically has tense relations with Turkey, immediately offered to send rescue workers. The Athens government also sent help when earthquakes struck western Turkey in 1999, killing about 18,000 people.
Most of the country lies on the North Anatolian fault and minor earthquakes occur frequently.
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