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AsiaSoutheast Asia

Kinabalu climbers wounded and buildings damaged as Malaysia struck by magnitude 6 quake

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Climbers on Mount Kinabalu in this file photo. Photo: Charlotte Travel

A magnitude 6 earthquake struck near Malaysia’s Mount Kinabalu on Borneo today, cracking roads and buildings in the region and injuring climbers on the popular peak, officials and media reports said.

At least four climbers had suffered injuries including broken bones and head wounds as the quake loosened stones and boulders on the 4,095-metre mountain’s wide granite summit, according to state officials quoted by the New Straits Times.

The force of the tremor was so strong that it snapped off one of the two “Donkey’s Ear” rock outcroppings that form a distinctive part of the peak’s craggy profile, sending it crashing into a gully, tourism minister for Sabah state Masidi Manjun said on his Twitter feed.

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All climbing activities have been halted until further notice.

The US Geological Survey said the quake struck at around 7.15am, local time, at a depth of 10 kilometres, with its epicentre located about 54 kilometres east of Kota Kinabalu, capital of Sabah.

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No tsunami warning was issued, and there were no initial reports of major damage.

Colin Forsythe, a resident of Kota Kinabalu, said the quake lasted around 15 seconds and felt “as if a truck had crashed into a brick wall”.

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