Five dead after quake triggers tsunami

Residents take their belongings to higher ground after a Tsunami alarm at Talcahuano city, south...
Residents take their belongings to higher ground after a Tsunami alarm at Talcahuano city, south of Santiago on the southern Pacific coast. Photo by Reuters
A fire is seen at Iquique city from the top floor of a building during a vertical evacuation...
A fire is seen at Iquique city from the top floor of a building during a vertical evacuation after a tsunami alarm at Iquique city, north of Santiago on the southern Pacific coast. Photo by Reuters

A major earthquake of magnitude 8.2 struck off the coast of Chile, triggering a tsunami, causing landslides that blocked highways and leading to five deaths.

Officials said the dead included people who were crushed by collapsing walls or were killed by heart attacks.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake was shallow at 20km below the seabed and struck about 100 km northwest of the mining port of Iquique, near the Peruvian border.

The government said it had no reports of significant damage to coastal areas, but about 300 prisoners took advantage of the confusion and escaped from a female penitentiary in Iquique, Interior Minister Rodrigo Penailillo said.

About 16 of the women were soon recaptured, Chile's investigative police said, while security forces fanned out through the area amid reports of power outages.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said the quake generated a large tsunami with the biggest wave reported at 2.3 metres. The Chilean navy said the first big wave hit the coast within 45 minutes.

Iquique is a key copper exporting port, close to Chile's main copper mines. The area has been on high alert in recent weeks after an unusual number of tremors.

The government evacuated Chile's northern coast and a tsunami warning was issued for the Pacific coast of Mexico through Central and South America.

Chile is the world's No. 1 copper producer but key mining firms said there was no serious damage to their operations. The tsunami alert in the country would however go on for at least another six hours, the government said late on Tuesday.

In 2010, an 8.8-magnitude quake triggered a tsunami that devastated several coastal towns in central-south Chile, a disaster that killed 526 people.

Chile's ONEMI emergency office said late on Tuesday that landslides were partially blocking some roads and highways.

State-owned miner Codelco reported no harm to its workers or mines, and said its operations in northern Chile were normal.

Chile's Collahuasi copper mine and port had no immediate problems following the quake, chief executive Jorge Gomez told Reuters, and mining company BHP Billiton said it had not received reports of damage.

"An earthquake of this size has the potential to generate a destructive tsunami that can strike coastlines near the epicenter within minutes and more distant coastlines within hours," the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said.

"An evaluation of the Pacific wide tsunami threat is underway and there is a possibility that Hawaii could be elevated to a watch or warning status," it added.

Authorities in Peru started evacuating communities in the southern coastal region of Ica. Electricity was partially lost in the Peruvian cities of Tacna, Moquegua and Arequipa but there were no reports of deaths or serious damage there.

 

New Zealand was not believed to be at risk.

The Ministry of Civil Defence & Emergency Management had assessed the information with the assistance of scientific advisers and based on current information, the initial assessment was that the earthquake was unlikely to have caused a tsunami that would pose a threat to New Zealand, the statement read.

There are currently 192 New Zealand nationals registered as being in Chile. It was too soon for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade to know how many, if any, were affected. 

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