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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Guardian staff and agencies

With tsunami warnings lifted, millions return home after powerful Pacific earthquake

Honolulu beachgoers gather at Waikiki Beach after Hawaii authorities downgraded tsunami warnings following an earthquake off Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula.
Honolulu beachgoers gather at Waikiki Beach after Hawaii authorities downgraded tsunami warnings following an earthquake off Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula. Photograph: Marco Garcia/Reuters

Tsunami warnings were lifted across the Pacific rim on Wednesday, allowing millions of temporary evacuees to return home after one of the strongest earthquakes ever recorded hit off the coast Russia.

The 8.8-magnitude quake rattled Russia’s sparsely populated Kamchatka peninsula, triggering tsunami warnings and evacuations from Japan to the United States to Ecuador.

Storm surges of up to four metres (12 feet) were predicted for some parts of the Pacific, after the shallow quake struck on Wednesday morning.

The tsunamis caused widespread disruption. Peru closed 65 of its 121 Pacific ports and authorities on Maui cancelled flights to and from the Hawaiian island. But fears of a catastrophe were not realised, with country after country lifting or downgrading warnings and telling coastal residents they could return.

In Japan, almost two million people had been ordered to higher ground, before the warnings were downgraded or rescinded. The Fukushima nuclear plant in northeast Japan – destroyed by a huge quake and tsunami in 2011 – was temporarily evacuated.

The only reported fatality was a woman killed while driving her car off a cliff in Japan as she tried to escape, local media reported.

In Chile, authorities conducted what the interior ministry said was “perhaps the most massive evacuation ever carried out in our country” – with 1.4 million people ordered to high ground. Chilean authorities reported no damage or victims and registered waves of just 60 centimeters (two feet) on the country’s north coast.

In the Galápagos Islands, where waves of up to three meters were expected, there was relief as the Ecuadoran navy’s oceanographic institute said the danger had passed.

Locals reported the sea level falling and then rising suddenly, a phenomenon which is commonly seen with the arrival of a tsunami.

But only a surge of just over a metre was reported, causing no damage. “Everything is calm, I’m going back to work. The restaurants are reopening and the places tourists visit are also open again,” said 38-year-old Santa Cruz resident Isabel Grijalva.

Earlier national parks were closed, schools were shuttered, loudspeakers blared warnings and tourists were spirited off sightseeing boats and on to the safety of land.

The worst damage was seen in Russia, where a tsunami crashed through the port of Severo-Kurilsk and submerged the local fishing plant, officials said. Russian state television footage showed buildings and debris swept into the sea.

The surge of water reached as far as the town’s second world war monument about 400 meters from the shoreline, said mayor Alexander Ovsyannikov. The initial quake also caused limited damage and only light injuries, despite being the strongest since 2011, when 15,000 people were killed in Japan.

Russian scientists reported that the Klyuchevskoy volcano erupted shortly after the earthquake. “Red-hot lava is observed flowing down the western slope. There is a powerful glow above the volcano and explosions,” said Russia’s Geophysical Survey.

Wednesday’s quake was the strongest in the Kamchatka region since 1952, the regional seismic monitoring service said, warning of aftershocks of up to 7.5 magnitude.

The US Geological Survey said the quake was one of the 10 strongest tremors recorded since 1900. It was followed by dozens of aftershocks that further shook the Russian Far East, including one of 6.9 magnitude.

The USGS said there was a 59% chance of an aftershock of more than 7.0 magnitude in the next week.

With AFP

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