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State of emergency declared in PNG after major quake

AFP  |  Sydney 

A state of emergency has been declared in Papua New Guinea's remote highlands after a major earthquake shook the region in what said was an "unprecedented disaster" for local communities. O'Neill said his was working to restore services and provide aid to the affected Hela, Southern Highlands, and provinces in the Pacific nation's mountainous interior. "This is an unprecedented disaster in the Highlands region and the appropriate response is underway by government," O'Neill said in a statement late Thursday. "A state of emergency has been declared to expedite the restoration of essential including health-care services, schools, road access, airports, power and " The added that 450 million kina (USD140 million) had been allocated by the for disaster relief. The (IFRC) said yesterday that it was contributing a further USD 221,000 to support the relief operations. There have been multiple and conflicting reports of casualties amid severely and poor access to the affected areas. One in told PNG's newspaper today that at least seven people had died in the 7.5-magnitude quake on Monday, which struck 90 kilometres (55 miles) south of Porgera in province. The PNG Post-Courier newspaper on Wednesday said 14 victims had been confirmed in the and There has been no official toll released by the so far. have reported that aerial surveys of the worst-hit areas showed bridges and infrastructure destroyed, along with private homes, while images revealed large cracks in the ground. Some roads were blocked by landslides and sinkholes, while others had collapsed in places. district Johnson Tiki, from province, told that "80 to 90 per cent of all buildings are down". "All district administration buildings are down, hospital down, down, public servants' houses down," he added. Aftershocks have continued to rumble through the rugged region.

The latest was a 5.9-magnitude tremor that struck about 1.00pm local time today. Tiki said there was "great fear in the whole of Hela" amid the aftershocks, adding that locals were experiencing them "every 30 minutes, five minutes, two minutes". The region is home to oil and gas production, and and Australia's said earlier this week that they had shut down their facilities after the quake to access the damage and as a precautionary measure.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 02 2018. 14:35 IST
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