Sharp quake rattles New Zealand city

October 19, 2010 10:49 am | Updated November 28, 2021 09:30 pm IST - WELLINGTON

An earthquake rattled the southern New Zealand city of Christchurch on Tuesday, cutting power and phone service and sending some residents running into the streets just weeks after a more powerful quake caused extensive damage.

The magnitude 5.0 temblor was one of hundreds of aftershocks that have hit the city since a magnitude-7 quake on Sept. 4 that wrecked thousands of homes, tore up farmland but did not kill anyone. The latest one shook buildings and sent objects tumbling from shelves, but there were no immediate reports of injuries.

“Very scary,” said cafe owner Flick Holmes. “It definitely was a very big one. Everything rocked. Just when you think you’re getting used to it, (another) goes,” she said.

Regional civil defence official Jon Mitchell said authorities had received reports of damage to stone and brick buildings but no reports of significant damage. The quake had sparked the evacuation of many businesses in the central city, he said.

Prime Minister John Key told reporters he was concerned for the city’s resident who “just want the aftershocks to come to an end”.

Tuesday’s quake was centered six miles (10 kilometers) southwest of the city and just five miles (nine kilometers) below the surface, New Zealand’s geological agency GNS Science said. It was felt strongly because it was so shallow, agency seismologist Bill Fry told New Zealand’s National Radio.

More aftershocks of a similar magnitude were likely and the region could still be experiencing aftershocks in a year’s time, Mr. Fry said.

Electricity and phone service were cut to several parts of the city, civil defence officials said.

“All our china is smashed in our kiosk,” said Fiona Fidow at the Cupcake Collection shop in Westfield Mall in suburban Riccarton.

“The mall has been evacuated. Quite a few people are crying and hysterical. There are a lot of frightened people,” she told the “Stuff” news web site.

About 300 workers were evacuated from a construction site at Christchurch International Airport, while the airport itself reopened after it was closed briefly so engineers could check its runways for cracks.

Officials have estimated that 50,000 homes in the city need major repairs from the earlier quake, with some 1,200 houses likely to be demolished and rebuilt. They have estimated that the full bill for quake damage could reach 4 billion New Zealand dollars ($2.9 billion).

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