Strong 7.2 quake rocks Papua New Guinea

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PORT MORESBY, May 7, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A powerful but deep 7.2-magnitude
earthquake rocked Papua New Guinea on Tuesday, officials said, cutting power
and knocking items off shelves though there were no immediate reports of
serious damage.

The quake struck at a depth of 127 kilometers (80 miles) about 30
kilometers (20 miles) from the town of Bulolo at 2119 GMT Monday according to
the US Geological Survey, and was felt in the capital Port Moresby about 250
kilometres away.

Officials said there were no immediate reports of major damage and the
depth of the tremor meant there was no tsunami threat.

“We have no reports as yet” of serious damage, Inspector Leo Kaikas, Bulolo
police station commander, told AFP. “We are still assessing the situation,”
he said.

Staff at Bulolo’s Pine Lodge hotel said there was very minor damage from
objects falling off tables, but nothing more serious.

Residents in Lae, more than 100 kilometres away, said the quake knocked
things off shelves and worktops and cut electricity in some areas.

“I had just woken up,” Christopher Lam, a designer who lives in the city,
told AFP. “It lasted a little more than 30 seconds. We had household items
knocked off their shelves and the power got cut.

“Things seem to have returned to normal. No structural damage here, though
I’m not sure about other buildings in the city.”

There are estimated to be around 110,000 people living within 50 kilometers
of the epicentre, according to UN data.

The Moresby-based National Disaster Management office said while there were
no early reports of damage, but news from the quake zone could take time to
trickle in.

“We are awaiting assessments,” a spokesman told AFP.

The country’s rugged highlands region was hit by a 7.5-magnitude quake in
February last year that buried homes and triggered landslides, killing at
least 125 people.

The scale of that disaster did not become apparent for days due to PNG’s
poor communications and infrastructure.

There are regular earthquakes in Papua New Guinea, which sits on the so-
called Pacific Ring of Fire — a hotspot for seismic activity due to friction
between tectonic plates.

Along the South Solomon trench, an area of the Pacific that includes PNG,
there have been 13 quakes of magnitude 7.5 or more recorded since 1900,
according to USGS data.