Sunday, February 28, 2010 
03:25 Mecca time, 00:25 GMT 

Untuk melihat video footage silahkan  click :  

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2010/02/201022774452701256.html

      Chile quake death toll soars 

               Chile quake death toll soars 
                  Magnitude 8.8 earthquake kills at least 214 people, interior 
ministry says.  
                          Chile responds to massive quake  
                          'This was not a regular tremor'  
                          'State of catastrophe' after quake hits Chile  
                          Chile's earthquake explained  
                          Timeline: Recent major earthquakes  
                 
           
     
     

           
      At least 214 people have been confirmed dead after a devastating 
earthquake struck Chile and triggered tsunami warnings across the Pacific ocean.

      The 8.8-magnitude earthquake struck early on Saturday 92km northeast of 
Concepcion, Chile's second largest city, at a depth of 63km at 3:34am local 
time (06:43 GMT).

      The quake, which lasted for one minute, damaged buildings and caused 
blackouts as far away as Santiago, 320km northeast of the epicentre.

      Michelle Bachelet, the outgoing president, declared a "state of 
catastrophe" and warned that more deaths were possible.



      "I want to call on all the people of Chile to remain calm ... There have 
been some aftershocks, but so far our national organisations are still up and 
running," she said.

      Jason Mitchell, a freelance journalist in Santiago, told Al Jazeera: "A 
new president takes over Chile in about 12 days time, so this was a 
transitional time.

      "Sebastian Pinera, the incoming president ... His ministers have all met 
with the outgoing ministers and they're trying to build a co-ordinated response.

      "We know a 15-storey building in Concepion has collapsed. Authorities 
have rescued 20 people from the building, but there are at least another 60 
still missing.

      "Chile's a country that has earthquakes before, so it was reasonably well 
prepared for this. The country has some of the most strictest building laws in 
the world."

      Tsunami warning lifted

      A four-metre high wave triggered by the earthquake hit Hiva Oa, part of 
the Marquesas Islands in French Polynesia, early on Saturday but there were no 
casualties, the high commissioner said.

      Waters receded from Hawaii's shore at around 11am (2200GMT) on Saturday, 
with residents braced for high waves, but the tsunami alert was lifted a few 
hours later, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said.

           
            Chile, which has had quakes before, has some of the strictest 
building laws in the world [AFP]
              
      Waves up to 1.5 metres high also rammed into New Zealand on Sunday, but 
there were no reports of serious damage.

      In Australia, officials recorded the first effects on Sunday of the 
wide-ranging tsunami, reporting a rise in sea levels, but no major waves.

      Kevin McCue, president of the Australian Earthquake Engineering Society, 
told Al Jazeera: "An earthquake of this size occurs one every ten years. This 
quake would have ruptured the earth's surface for about 800km, which is a very 
long fault line to produce a tsunami.

      "I'm surprised it produced such a small tsunami as a result. But everyone 
is still on alert right across the Pacific."

      Warnings were issued for across the Pacific from Latin America to the 
Pacific Rim nations of New Zealand, Australia, Japan, the Philippines and 
Indonesia. 

      Buildings collapsed

      Chilean TV showed images of collapsed homes in Concepcion, a large 
building completely engulfed in flames and injured people lying in the streets 
or on stretchers.

           
               
      It reported that the earthquake had destroyed many roads, making it 
impossible for vehicles to get through. Electricity and water supplies had been 
cut.

      Phone lines were either down or busy, making confirmation of damage 
difficult elsewhere, especially further south towards the epicentre. 

      According to a 2002 census, Concepcion is one of the largest cities in 
Chile with a population of around 670,000.

      In Santiago, Chile's international airport was to be closed for at least 
24 hours due to damage caused by the earthquake, local television reported.

      The US Geological Survey (USGS) recorded eight aftershocks, the largest 
measuring 6.9 magnitude at 08:01 GMT.

      In 1960, Chile was hit by the world's biggest earthquake since records 
dating back to 1900, USGS data shows.

      The 9.5 magnitude quake devastated the south-central city of Valdivia, 
killing 1,655 people and sending a tsunami which battered Easter Island 3,700km 
off Chile's Pacific seaboard and continued as far as Hawaii, Japan and the 
Philippines.
     


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