A major magnitude quake rocks Indonesia's Papua
6 April AFP
A 7.1-magnitude earthquake struck the eastern Indonesian province of
Papua on Saturday, the US Geological Survey said, sending panicked
crowds running into the streets. There were no immediate reports of
damage and no tsunami warning was issued after the quake struck on land
at 1:42 pm (0442 GMT) at a depth of 75 kilometres (46 miles), 272
kilometres west-southwest of provincial capital Jayapura, the USGS said.
Local seismologists had measured the quake at 7.2 magnitude. People in
the area told AFP they felt the quake strongly and hundreds went running
into the streets, witnesses told AFP. Narsi Bay said she was in a
meeting on the first floor of a hotel inJayapura when she felt "strong
shaking".
"I went downstairs to go outside as quickly as I could as I was
afraid that the building would collapse," she told AFP.
"The quake happened on land, there is no tsunami threat," an official
from the country's meteorology, climatology and geophysics agency told
AFP. "We haven't received any reports of damage."
Indonesia sits on the Pacific "Ring of Fire" where continental plates
collide, causing frequent seismic and volcanic activity.
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