Chile counts cost of ‘nightmare’ quake
COQUIMBO, Chile—Traumatized Chileans described Thursday the terrifying moment a powerful earthquake hit, killing at least 11 people and triggering tsunami waves that ravaged long stretches of the coast.
The 8.3-magnitude offshore earthquake Wednesday evening was the sixth strongest in the history of geologically volatile Chile and the most powerful anywhere in the world this year, officials said.
READ: Powerful Chile quake kills at least five, 1 million evacuated
Close to one million people were evacuated from Pacific coastal areas as a precaution as Chile sounded a tsunami alert, with warnings issued as far away as Japan and New Zealand.
Residents took refuge on high ground as aftershocks jolted the region all night and into Thursday.
Article continues after this advertisementMaria Zamorano, 60, recounted how she and her large family ran from the shoreline in Coquimbo to save themselves from the surging tsunami waves.
Article continues after this advertisement“If we had stayed here we would have perished,” she told AFP.
READ: Strong quake shakes Chile capital, causing buildings to sway
The quake occurred at a shallow depth and the epicenter was 228 kilometers (about 140 miles) north of the capital Santiago, a city of 6.6 million people, where there were scenes of pandemonium as thousands fled swaying buildings.
In the hours that followed, tsunami waves of up to 4.5 meters (15 feet) came crashing onshore in Coquimbo region, 400 km north of Santiago, causing extensive damage to the region’s main port.
Fishing boats, trucks, cars and the remains of dozens of houses were among the debris bobbing up and down in Coquimbo city’s waterfront on Thursday.
There were similar scenes in the badly hit coastal town of Illapel.
“It was a nightmare,” Maria Ramirez told AFP as she swept up debris outside her house.
“We felt the tremors for a long time, too long. And then all the aftershocks—it was terrible,” she said.
“I couldn’t stay standing, but luckily we made it out alive.”
Ring of fire
President Michelle Bachelet headed to the quake-hit area Thursday to assess the relief efforts and Secretary of State John Kerry said the United States was ready to help.
“We know this is a very difficult situation,” Bachelet said after meeting a group of local fishermen in Coquimbo.
“But we wish to salute the enormous cooperation of the population which ensured that—despite the scale of this earthquake—there are thankfully few victims.”
The most recent toll from the quake stood at 11 dead, with nine others injured, according to National Emergency Office (ONEMI) director Ricardo Toro.
The last known victim was a man killed in Coquimbo.
At least 526 homes were damaged in the quake, most of them in the Coquimbo region, according to the ONEMI. A state of emergency was declared in the area, Interior Minister Jorge Burgos said.
Chile lies on what is known as the “Ring of Fire”—an arc of fault lines that circles the Pacific Basin and is prone to frequent earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
In February 2010, an 8.8-magnitude quake off the southern Chilean coast killed more than 500 people and inflicted an estimated $30 billion in damages.
The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center had warned that tsunami waves were possible this time in French Polynesia, Hawaii and California, as well as smaller waves as far afield as Japan and New Zealand.
A minor tsunami was monitored in northern Japan early Friday, authorities there said.
‘Horrific moment’
In Illapel, a town of 30,000, daybreak revealed the damage done, with power knocked out, shacks destroyed, store shelves overturned and the local cemetery a chaos of broken crosses, vases and coffins.
“It was the most horrific moment, a terrible thing,” local resident Ana Cortes, 35, told AFP. “Everything just kept moving, for the longest time.”
Facebook said it had activated a geolocation tool allowing people in Chile to reassure friends and loved ones.
The Safety Check tool is accessed through Facebook’s regular interface, and lets members check whether their contacts are in a disaster zone, signal their own presence and let others know they are safe and well.