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Five dead, 1,000 homes destroyed in Papua New Guinea earthquake

AFP

PORT MORESBY—At least five people were killed and an about 1,000 homes destroyed when a magnitude 6.9 earthquake rattled Papua New Guinea, officials said on Monday.

Dozens of villages on the banks of the Sepik River were already battling floods when the quake struck early Sunday morning.

“So far, around 1,000 homes have been lost,” said East Sepik Gov. Allan Bird, adding that emergency crews were “still assessing the impact” from a tremor that “damaged most parts of the province.”

Provincial police commander Christopher Tamari told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that authorities had so far recorded five deaths, adding that the number could rise.

Photos showed damaged wooden houses with thatched roofs collapsing into the surrounding knee-high floodwaters, while an aging bridge in the provincial capital of Wewak buckled under the strain.

Pressing need

Regional Governor Bird said there was a pressing need to get medical supplies, clean drinking water and temporary shelter into the disaster zone.

Prime Minister James Marape has approved $130 million to help recovery efforts following “a spate of natural disasters” across the country.

“Papua New Guinea has been recently hit hard by [the] earthquake, flooding caused by heavy rain and ensuing landslips, king tides, strong winds, and others,” he said in a statement on Sunday evening following the quake.

Flooding, landslides and torrential rains earlier this month killed at least 23 people in the country’s interior Highlands region.The Sepik River twists for hundreds of kilometers through Papua New Guinea’s East Sepik province, flowing down from the jungle highlands and out towards the tropical coast.

Largely untouched by urban development and industry, it is one of the nation’s last pristine waterways—and is the longest river on the island.

Teeming with native species and rare plants, it has in the past been dubbed the planet’s “second Amazon.”

See Also

Earthquakes are common in Papua New Guinea, which sits on top of the seismic “Ring of Fire”—an arc of intense tectonic activity that stretches through Southeast Asia and across the Pacific basin.

Although they seldom cause widespread damage in the sparsely populated jungle highlands, they can trigger destructive landslides.

Many of the island nation’s nine million citizens live outside major towns and cities, where the difficult terrain and lack of sealed roads can seriously hamstring search-and-rescue efforts.

Papua New Guinea is ranked as the world’s 16th most at-risk country to climate change and natural hazards, according to the 2022 World Risk Index. —AFP

 


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