FRIDAY, March 29, 2024
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Strong quake in Croatia topples buildings, shakes central Europe

Strong quake in Croatia topples buildings, shakes central Europe

Croatia suffered its strongest earthquake in 140 years - for the second time in 2020 - with the tremor killing at least five people, devastating the city at its epicenter and rattling Europeans as far away as Rome and Vienna.

The temblor, measured at 6.3 by the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre on Tuesday, was larger than both a 5.2 quake on Monday and a 5.3 tremor that caused $6 billion in damage when it hit the capital of Zagreb in March.

The earthquake brought down buildings near its epicenter in the town of Petrinja, where it killed a girl who was about 13 years old, according to police. Four more people, including a father and son, were killed nearby in Glina, the town's deputy mayor said, according to the Hina news agency.

Most buildings in Petrinja were total losses, Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic said at the scene. Authorities were evacuating the hospital in the nearby city of Sisak, and the tremor damaged structures in Zagreb, where people left their homes to wait out potential aftershocks.

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

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

The quake was also felt in Rome, Budapest and Vienna. 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% 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."

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

Deputy Prime Minister Davor Bozinovic said the government was lifting a ban on traveling between counties imposed earlier this month to stop a spike in new cases of coronavirus so people whose homes were destroyed could stay with relatives.

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.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Twitter that she had spoken with Plenkovic and that the bloc was ready to provide support.

"We stand with Croatia," she said.

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