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The aftermath of the earthquake in Petrinja, Croatia. Photo: AFP

‘Pure horror’ after Croatia hit by worst earthquake in 140 years

  • Second earthquake in two days strikes central Croatia
  • Devastates town, felt as far away as Rome and Vienna
Earthquakes
Agencies

A search for survivors stretched into Wednesday after the worst earthquake to hit Croatia in 140 years killed at least seven people in the country’s interior, tearing down rooftops and piling bricks in the streets

The 6.4-magnitude quake on Tuesday was felt as far afield as Vienna but the heavy damage was concentrated in and around Petrinja, a town of around 20,000 some 50km (30 miles) south of Croatia’s capital Zagreb.

The was more powerful than both a 5.2 quake on Monday and a similar-sized tremor that caused US$6 billion in damage when it hit Zagreb in March.

Among the dead were a girl who was about 13 years old and a father and son.

Most buildings in Petrinja were damaged so badly they’re now unusable, Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic said at the scene. Authorities evacuated the hospital in the nearby city of Sisak, and the tremor also damaged structures in Zagreb, where people left their homes to wait out any potential aftershocks.

“2020 has brought us tragedy after tragedy,” Plenkovic said in comments on N1 Television. The broadcaster reported at least 20 people had been hospitalised with injuries, with two in serious condition.

The disaster adds to an already difficult year for the Adriatic European Union member state, which is still busy repairing the 20,000 buildings damaged during the March quake while also tackling one of the bloc’s worst surges in coronavirus cases and a record economic recession.

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The US Geological Survey said the temblor was the nation’s strongest since the advent of modern seismic instrumentation, which began to gain prevalence in the 1880s.

Croatian soldiers clear rubble next to damaged buildings in Petrinja. Photo: AFP

It was more powerful than one in 1963 that hit near the former Yugoslav town of Skopje, now the capital of North Macedonia, that killed more than 1,000 people and destroyed 80 per cent of the city.

“This is horrible,” President Zoran Milanovic said while observing the damage in Petrinja. “Pure horror. The army is here, coming to help evacuate people.”

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In Petrinja, a city of about 25,000 people that was almost destroyed in the bloody 1991-1995 break-up of Yugoslavia, video footage showed demolished houses and fallen roofs that resembled the damage from the war.

Bozinovic, the deputy premier, said the government was lifting a ban on travelling between counties imposed earlier this month to stop a spike in new cases of Covid-19 so that people whose homes were destroyed could stay with relatives.

Damaged vehicles in Sisak, Croatia. Photo; Xinhua

The quake also triggered the automatic shutdown of Slovenia’s Krsko nuclear power plant, with that country’s infrastructure minister saying initial checks showed no damage had occurred.

Both Hungary and Slovenia said they were sending support, while European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Twitter she’d spoken with Plenkovic and was ready to provide aid.

Janez Lenarcic, the EU’s commissioner for disaster relief, will arrive in Croatia on Wednesday, and he said the bloc was sending help today including winter tents, electric heaters, sleeping bags, and housing containers.

Bloomberg, Agence France-Presse, Reuters

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Seven dead in worst quake in 140 years
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