Northern Italy quake
More than 3,000 people were later evacuated from their homes amid fears of fresh
tremors.
“I was woken at around 04:00 by the quake, it was strong and lasted up to a minute,
maybe more”, Frankie Thompson, a UK travel journalist in Bologna, told the BBC.
“Church bells were set off spontaneously... followed by an eerie silence. Small
aftershocks kept coming and going until maybe 05:50 when a stronger tremor shook us
again but not as long and dramatic as the first”, she added.
Northern Italy is frequently rocked by minor earthquakes, but the country is well-
prepared to deal with them, the BBC's Alan Johnston in Rome reports.
In January, a magnitude-5.3 quake hit northern Italy but caused no injuries.
TEXT 7
TSUNAMI HITS JAPAN AFTER MASSIVE QUAKE
11 March 2011
Japan's most powerful earthquake since records began has struck the north-east coast,
triggering a massive tsunami.
Cars, ships and buildings were swept away by a wall of water after the 8.9-magnitude
tremor, which struck about 400 km (250 miles) north-east of Tokyo.
A state of emergency has been declared at a nuclear power plant, where pressure has
exceeded normal levels.
Officials say 350 people are dead and about 500 missing, but it is feared the final death
toll will be much greater.
In one ward alone in Sendai, a port city in Miyagi prefecture, 200 to 300 bodies were
found.
In the centre of Tokyo many people are spending the night in their offices. But
thousands, perhaps millions, chose to walk home. Train services were suspended.
Even after the most violent earthquake anyone could remember the crowds were
orderly and calm. The devastation is further to the north, along the Pacific coast.
There a tsunami triggered by the quake reached 10 km (six miles) inland in places
carrying houses, buildings, boats and cars with it. In the city of Sendai the police found up to
300 bodies in a single ward. Outside the city in a built-up area a fire blazed across several
kilometers.
Japan's ground self-defence forces have been deployed, and the government has
asked the US military based in the country for help. The scale of destruction from the biggest
quake ever recorded in Japan will become clear only at first light.
The quake was the fifth-largest in the world since 1900 and nearly 8,000 times stronger
than the one which devastated Christchurch, New Zealand, last month, said scientists.
— 53 —
Measured at 8.9 by the US Geological Survey, it struck at 1446 local time (0546 GMT)
at a depth of about 24 km.
The tsunami rolled across the Pacific at 800 km / h (500 mph) - as fast as a jetliner —
before hitting Hawaii and the US West Coast.
Thousands of people were ordered to evacuate coastal areas in the states of
California, Oregon and Washington, but there were no reports of major damage.
The biggest waves of more than 6-7 ft (about 2m) were recorded near California's
Crescent City, said the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre.
A tsunami warning was extended across the Pacific to North and South America, where
many other coastal regions were evacuated, but the alert has since been lifted in most parts,
including the Philippines, Australia and China.
Strong waves hit Japan's Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures, damaging dozens of
coastal communities.
A 10 m wave struck Sendai, deluging farmland and sweeping cars across the airport's
runway. Fires broke out in the centre of the city.
Japan's NHK television showed a massive surge of debris-filled water reaching far
inland, consuming houses, cars and ships.
Motorists could be seen trying to speed away from the wall of water.
In other developments:
•
A passenger train was missing in Miyagi prefecture, and a ship carrying 100 people
was swept away, police told Japanese media;
•
Fire has engulfed swathes of coastland, including homes and buildings, at
Kesennuma city in Miyagi;
•
A major explosion hit a petrochemical plant in Sendai; further south a huge blaze
swept through an oil refinery in Ichihara city, Chiba prefecture;
•
Some 1,800 homes are reported to have been destroyed in the city of Minamisoma,
Fukushima prefecture;
•
A dam burst in north-eastern Fukushima prefecture, sweeping away homes, Kyodo
news agency reports;
•
At least 20 people were injured in Tokyo when the roof of a hall collapsed on to
a graduation ceremony.
Nearly 3,000 people have been ordered to evacuate from near the Fukushima power plant,
where the cooling system in a reactor failed as it shut down automatically during the quake.
Pressure inside one of six boiling water reactors at the plant has risen to 1.5 times the
level considered normal, said the country's nuclear safety agency.
Japan's Trade Minister Banri Kaieda said that a small radiation leak could occur at the
facility.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said earlier the US Air Force had flown emergency
coolant to the site.
In a televised address, Prime Minister Naoto Kan extended his sympathy to the victims
of the disaster and said an emergency response headquarters had been set up.
The UN's nuclear agency said four nuclear power plants had shut down safely.
Residents and workers in Tokyo rushed out of apartment buildings and office blocks
and gathered in parks and open spaces as aftershocks continued to hit.
“This is the kind of earthquake that hits once every 100 years”, said restaurant worker
Akira Tanaka.
Train services have been suspended and millions of commuters were stranded in the
Japanese capital.
About four million homes in and around Tokyo suffered power cuts.
— 54 —
TEXT 8
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