Advertisement
Advertisement
Rescue workers check a house that was damaged in the magnitude 6.6 earthquake that hit Jinghe county in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region on Wednesday. Photo: Xinhua

Magnitude 6.6 earthquake hits remote area of northwest China’s Xinjiang region

No casualties reported as quake hits sparsely populated Jinghe county, but tremor felt several hundred kilometres away, reports say

An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.6 struck a remote and sparsely populated part of China’s far northwestern region of Xinjiang on Wednesday morning, the Chinese earthquake administration said.

No casualties were reported by authorities. The US Geological Survey put the magnitude of the quake at 6.3.

The tremor followed a powerful quake late on Tuesday in China’s Sichuan province, more than 2,000km to the southeast, that killed nine people and injured 164.

The quake in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region struck at a depth of 11km in the Bortala Mongolian autonomous prefecture, the China Earthquake Administration said.

The earthquake administration’s office in the Xinjiang capital, Urumqi, said on its official Twitter-like Weibo social media account that there were no villages located within a 5km radius of the quake, nor townships within 20km.

Jinghe county, where the epicentre was located, has a population of about 140,000, Xinhua reported. It is about 100km from the border with Kazakhstan.

Residents several hundred kilometres away in Urumqi, and the cities of Karamay and Yining, felt strong tremors, Xinhua said, adding that the jolt lasted about 20 seconds.

Xinjiang is China’s largest and most remote region, but it carries strategic weight as a gateway to Central Asia and the West, and as a key domestic source of oil, natural gas and coal.

Post