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Five dead, 13 wounded in Honduras quake: official

No contact with Honduran island after quake: Red Cross
The Red Cross in Honduras said it has been unable to contact an island near the epicentre of a powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake that struck Thursday. But no injuries or major damage were immediately reported, the official, Jessie Salazar, told AFP. The Red Cross had no contact with Roatan for more than one hour after the quake, whose epicentre was 63 kilometers (39 miles) northeast of the island, Salazar said. Some minor damage including power cuts were reported in Honduras after the quake, which shook parts of the country for 30 seconds, the Red Cross official said. Graphic courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Tegucigalpa, Honduras (AFP) May 28, 2009
A powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake rocked the economic and tourist heart of Honduras Thursday, killing five, wounding at least 17, and shaking neighboring countries as far away as Mexico.

Officials expected the death toll to rise as reports arrived from rugged areas around Honduras' Caribbean coast, and locals feared further aftershocks.

"I felt my bed sway like a hammock," said 40-year-old Elias Dominguez, a resident of El Progreso, 260 kilometers (161 miles) north of the capital, who was jolted awake by the quake in the middle of the night.

"The house moved as if it was on top of a wave."

Some 20 kilometers (15 miles) away, a 15-year-old boy died when a house collapsed on him.

The quake struck at 2:24 am (0824 GMT) off the northern coast of Honduras, near the tourist resort of the Islas de la Bahia in the Caribbean, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS).

The main tremor led to a 90-minute tsunami alert for Honduras and neighboring Guatemala and Belize, which was later withdrawn.

"We have a first report of five dead and 13 wounded," said Ana Rivera, spokeswoman of the Permanent Emergency Commission, at around midday.

Two children were among the dead, Commission chief Marco Burgos told local media.

The other deaths occurred on the Caribbean coast and in Gracias, in the west of the country, Burgos said. Only two of the country's 18 departments, in the south, were unaffected by the quake.

President Manuel Zelaya said the country had been lucky to avoid widespread devistation.

"Given the magnitude, the impact has not been what you might expect," Zelaya said.

The quake damaged two bridges, 50 homes, 10 schools, two public buildings, two hotels, a factory and a church, Rivera said.

A total of 17 aftershocks, all above magnitude 4.0, had been recorded, she added.

At least seven people were being treated for broken bones in hospital in San Pedro Sula, the country's economic capital in the worst-hit area near the northern coast, said Burgos.

San Pedro Sula is to host a general assembly of the Organization of American States on June 2 and 3.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton plans to be at the event as scheduled, State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said in Washington.

Kelly also said Washington was ready to help Honduras recover from the quake, though it had not yet received a request for aid.

Southeast of San Pedro Sula, half of the 120-meter (130-yard) Democracy bridge in El Progreso collapsed, and part of the town's prison wall crumbled. Police transferred the prisoners elsewhere, an AFP photographer saw.

Red Cross representative Jesse Salazar said that communications were cut to the tourist island of Roatan off the northern coast of Honduras.

The quake's epicenter was 130 kilometers (80 miles) north of La Ceiba on the coast and 63 kilometers (39 miles) northeast of Roatan on the Islas de la Bahia in the Caribbean, the USGS said.

Roatan is the biggest of the Bahia islands, popular for fishing and diving, and a major draw for US and European tourists and retirees.

Kenton Pinet, a receptionist at Infinity Bay resort on Roatan, told AFP by phone that "we did have a strong one ... but I haven't seen injuries."

On the mainland, worried locals poured onto the palm-lined streets of the capital and other towns in the mostly poor, mountainous nation of 7.6 million people.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued a tsunami watch immediately following the quake, but lifted it later when no reports of giant waves were made.

The last major earthquake to rattle the Central American nation was a 6. 7-magnitude temblor in July 1999, the USGS said.

Honduras's northern neighbor Guatemala declared a red alert in the northeast of the country, and reported 35 homes damaged.

Shocks of about magnitude 3.0 were felt on some points of Mexico's southeastern Yucatan Peninsula, Luis Carlos Rodriguez, from the civil protection services, told local radio.

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China to build world's largest quake simulator
Shanghai (AFP) May 26, 2009
A Chinese university said Tuesday it had started to build the world's largest quake simulator, a week after the first anniversary of the deadly earthquake in southwest China. It will be used to accurately test the designs of bridges, tunnels, subways, stadiums and skyscrapers, Shanghai's Tongji University said in an emailed statement. The four vibrating platforms, capable of carrying 200 ... read more







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