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Tsunami warnings relaxed after Indonesia quakes
by Staff Writers
Banda Aceh, Indonesia (AFP) April 11, 2012

Small tsunami reaches Thailand after huge quake
Bangkok (AFP) April 11, 2012 - A small tsunami measuring 10 centimetres (four inches) reached Thailand's Andaman Coast on Wednesday after a massive earthquake off the coast of Indonesia, an official said.

"A 10-centimetre tsunami wave generated by the first earthquake hit Koh Miang off Phang Nga," the director of Thailand's National Disaster Warning Centre, Somsak Khaosuwan, said on Thai television.

"But we cannot be complacent," he added, noting there had been several powerful aftershocks. "So we are maintaining the warning."

The centre earlier advised people on the Andaman coast, a magnet for foreign tourists, to move to higher places and stay as far away as possible from the sea.

The area was battered by an Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004 that killed an estimated 5,400 people in Thailand alone.

Since then, Thailand has installed a high-tech warning system designed to reassure tourists and businesses that the country's beaches are safe.

The latest Thai alert, triggered by an 8.6-magnitude quake off Sumatra island, covers six southern Andaman coastal provinces.

Flights to Phuket were diverted to other airports as passengers and staff were evacuated to higher ground, officials said.

The tremor was felt as far afield as Thailand and southern India.


A tsunami watch around the Indian Ocean was lifted hours after two massive earthquakes struck off Indonesia's Sumatra island Wednesday, sending terrified people fleeing from the coast.

The 8.6-magnitude quake hit 431 kilometres (268 miles) off the city of Banda Aceh at 0838 GMT, and was followed by another undersea quake measured at 8.2, the US Geological Survey said.

Panicky residents poured into the streets of Banda Aceh, which was near the epicentre of a 9.1-magnitude quake in 2004 that unleashed an Indian Ocean tsunami that killed 220,000 people including 170,000 in Aceh province.

Wednesday's quake was felt as far afield as Thailand, where skyscrapers in the capital Bangkok swayed. India, Indonesia, Kenya, Malaysia, Reunion Island, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Myanmar all issued alerts or evacuation orders which were later lifted.

Waves of up to 80 centimetres (31 inches) hit Indonesia's Aceh province, but there were no reports of damage or casualties.

US seismologists then cancelled the tsunami warning, saying the quakes had generated only small waves and were nowhere near the scale of the disasters that struck Asia in 2004 and Japan last year.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii said the threat of a tsunami has "diminished or is over for most areas".

Earlier in Banda Aceh, there were chaotic scenes as people grabbed their families and raced through crowded streets, with motorbikes and cars jostling for space.

"There are people trying to evacuate, some are praying and children at a school were panicking as teachers tried to get them out," an AFP correspondent in Banda Aceh said.

"There are traffic jams everywhere as people are trying to get away from the coast -- many are on motorcycles," he said, adding that telephone connections and electricity were patchy.

Television images showed hundreds gathering at a large mosque in Banda Aceh, many weeping and searching for family members. Women and girls draped head-to-toe in white were praying on mats laid out on the ground.

In Sri Lanka the disaster management centre asked residents on the coast to move inland to avoid being hit by any large waves. In the capital Colombo, nervous crowds gathered on the streets.

"There was a first jolt for five seconds, then a pause and then a really big one. It was really frightening, the whole room was shaking," said 42-year-old tourist Maria Teresa Pizarro from the Philippines.

"You could hear the wood in the furniture cracking, the curtains were moving and the ceiling fan was rattling. I just picked up the children and ran downstairs," she said from the city's seafront Galle Face hotel.

Thailand issued an evacuation order for its Andaman coast, a popular tourist destination, and flights to the tourist island of Phuket were diverted to other airports as passengers and staff were evacuated to higher ground.

A small tsunami measuring just 10 centimetres (four inches) reached the coast before Thailand, like other countries, lifted its warning.

"At this point people can be relieved," said Somsak Khaosuwan, the director of Thailand's National Disaster Warning Centre.

India issued a red high-level tsunami warning for the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, located in the Indian Ocean, and lower alerts for several other eastern coastal states.

Tremors were felt in the Indian eastern city of Kolkata, where cracks appeared in some tall buildings. A large number of people rushed out of offices in the city's central Park street area as windows and doors rattled.

In the Maldives, where luxury resorts cater to well-heeled holiday makers, hotels moved tourists away from beaches, with some even issuing guests with life jackets as a precaution.

The catastrophic tsunami of December 26, 2004, was generated by a 9.1-magnitude earthquake that struck in the ocean about 200 kilometres away from Wednesday's initial quake.

An expert with the British Geological Survey said the tsunamis were small because the quakes' movement was horizontal, not vertical, and caused no drop in the sea floor, which is what triggers tsunamis.

"Although an earthquake of this magnitude has the potential to cause a large tsunami... we haven't seen any drop of the sea floor, which is what generates the wave," seismologist Susanne Sargeant told AFP.

Last year, a 9.0-magnitude earthquake caused a tsunami and nuclear disaster in Japan, killing some 19,000 people.

The latest Indonesian quakes occurred in a notoriously seismic area, where the Indian tectonic plate descends into the Earth beneath the Eurasian plate.

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US center cancels tsunami warning after Indonesia quakes
Los Angeles (AFP) April 11, 2012 - US seismologists on Wednesday canceled its warning of a possible tsunami following a massive earthquake and aftershock off the coast of Sumatra.

"Sea level readings now indicate that the threat has diminished for most areas, therefore the tsunami watch issued by this center is now canceled," said the US Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii, which monitored currents in the Indian Ocean following the 8.6 magnitude quake and aftershock.

The quake was followed by a massive aftershock, measuring 8.2, off the Indonesian island.

But Victor Sardina, a geophysicist with the Hawaii warning center, told AFP the tsunami was "not anywhere near" as large as those that devastated southeast Asia in 2004 and Japan last year.

Sardina told AFP that the the tsunami measured a mere 35 centimeters (14 inches) near Padang, Indonesia, but could swell to as high as a meter (3 feet 4 inches) near Sri Lanka, adding that US scientists were still carefully monitoring the situation.

Earlier, the center said "earthquakes of this size have the potential to generate a widespread destructive tsunami."

The first quake struck at 2:38 pm (0838 GMT) at a depth of 33 kilometers (14.2 miles) with its epicenter some 435 kilometers (270 miles) from Banda Aceh.

The US Geological Survey said the aftershock struck at 10:43 GMT, 615 kilometers (382 miles) from Banda Aceh.

The area was one of the hardest-hit from the December 26, 2004 quake and subsequent tsunami that wrought devastation across the Indian Ocean and killed some 220,000 people.

The earthquake that caused the 2004 tsunami had a magnitude of 9.1, but also a much stronger vertical component, whereas Wednesday's earthquake was more horizontally directed, Sardina said.

Last year, a 9.0-magnitude earthquake caused a tsunami off northeastern Japan, killing some 19,000 people and sparking a nuclear disaster after an atomic power plant was swamped by the wave.



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SHAKE AND BLOW
Indonesian quake reawakens 2004 fears in Asia
Hong Kong (AFP) April 11, 2012
In nations around the Indian Ocean, thousands scrambled for higher ground Wednesday after powerful quakes triggered fears of a disaster in a region all too familiar with the power of a tsunami. Warnings that destructive waves could tear into coastal regions sparked mass evacuations from India to Kenya, reawakening painful memories of the catastrophic 2004 tsunami that claimed nearly a quarte ... read more


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