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Huge quakes off Indonesia stir panic, but no big tsunami

Huge quakes off Indonesia stir panic, but no big tsunami

(Reuters) –

A powerful 8.6 magnitude earthquake and a series of strong aftershocks struck off Indonesia on Wednesday, sending people

scurrying from buildings as far away as southern India, but there seemed little risk of a disastrous tsunami as in

2004.

Huge quakes off Indonesia stir panic, but

no big tsunami

Indonesia said it was

checking for damage and casualties but remarkably, no such reports had been received for several hours after the quakes,

including in Aceh, the closest province and the area decimated by the disaster eight years ago.

However, some areas

close to the epicenter are remote so it could take some time to find out if there was any damage.

Many people were

frightened of further tremors.

“It’s dark out here but I am scared to go home,” said Mila, a 41-year-old woman taking

refuge in the grand mosque in the town of Banda Aceh, the provincial capital.

“I just want to stay alert because I

fear there will be more quakes coming. We are human, it is only natural that we have fear, but I really wish we will all be

safe.”

Waves of up to one meter (3.3 feet) high were seen near islands off Aceh, but Indonesia cancelled a warning for

fresh tsunamis. It said the worst-hit area was the thinly populated island of Simeulue, off Aceh’s southern

coast.

The first quake struck at 4.38 a.m.EDT and an 8.2 magnitude aftershock just over two hours later, at 6.43 a.m.

EDT. Two more strong aftershocks hit later.

The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center also withdrew tsunami

warnings for the entire Indian Ocean after keeping them in force for several hours.

“Level readings now indicate that

the threat has diminished or is over for most areas,” the agency’s bulletin said.

Thailand and India also withdrew tsunami

warnings.

Thailand, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and India were all badly hit in 2004. At least 230,000 people in 13 Indian

Ocean countries were killed in the Boxing Day disaster that year, including 170,000 in and around Aceh alone.

Last

year, an earthquake and tsunami off Japan’s northeastern coast killed at least 23,000 people and triggered the world’s

worst nuclear crisis in 25 years after waves battered a nuclear power station.

On Wednesday, people near the coast in

six Thai provinces were ordered to move to higher ground. Authorities shut down the international airport in the Thai beach

resort province of Phuket.

The quakes were about 300 miles southwest of Banda Aceh, on the northern tip of

Indonesia’s Sumatra island, the U.S. Geological survey said. The first was at a depth of 20.5 miles.

Indonesia’s

disaster management agency said power failed in Aceh province and people were gathering on high ground as sirens warned of

the danger.

“The electricity is down, there are traffic jams to access higher ground. Sirens and Koran recitals from

mosques are everywhere,” said Sutopo, spokesman for the agency.

“The warning system worked,” Indonesian President

Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said.

Warning sirens also rang out across the Thai island of Phuket, a tourist hotspot that

was one of the worst hit areas in the 2004 tsunami.

“Guests from expensive hotels overlooking Phuket’s beaches were

evacuated to the hills behind and local people were driving away in cars and on motorcycles. Everyone seemed quite calm, the

warning had been issued well in advance,” freelance journalist Apichai Thonoy told Reuters by telephone.

OUT ON THE

STREETS

Indonesian television showed people gathering in mosques in Banda Aceh. Many others were on the streets,

holding crying children.

In the city of Medan, a hospital evacuated patients, who were wheeled out on beds and in

wheelchairs.

Wednesday’s quakes were felt as far away as the Thai capital, Bangkok, and in southern India, hundreds

of office workers in the city of Bangalore left their buildings while the port of Chennai closed down because of tsunami

fears.

The quakes were in roughly in the same area as the 2004 quake, which was at a depth of 18 miles along a fault

line running under the Indian Ocean, off western Indonesia and up into the Bay of Bengal.

Experts said Wednesday

quakes were a “strike-slip” fault, meaning a more horizontal shift of the ground under the sea as opposed to a sudden

vertical shift, and less risk of a large displacement of water triggering a tsunami.

“The nature of the sideways

rupture and sideways movement is not predisposed to cause a bad tsunami, so almost certainly, the crisis has been avoided,”

said David Rothery, an expert at the Open University in the U.K.

The quakes were also felt in Sri Lanka, where office

workers in the capital, Colombo, fled their offices.

Mahinda Amaraweera, Sri Lanka’s minister for disaster

management, called for calm while advising people near the coast to seek safety.

“I urge the people not to panic. We

have time if there is a tsunami going to come. So please evacuate if you are in the coastal area and move to safer places,”

Amaraweera told a private television channel.

In Bangladesh, where two tremors were felt, authorities said there

appeared to be no threat of a tsunami. Australia also said there was no threat of a tsunami

there.

(Reporting by Jakarta, New Delhi, Bangalore, Bangkok and Colombo bureaus; Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan;

Editing by Jonathan

Thatcher)

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