SIKKIM QUAKE
At least two people were killed and 25 injured Sunday,18th September,2011, in Sikkim after a 6.8 earthquake followed by two aftershocks shook the region, damaging houses and triggering mudslides.According to the Regional Seismological Centre in Shillong, the tremor was felt at 6.10 p.m. The first aftershock measuring 6.1 on the Richter Scale was experienced within 10 minutes. The second, measuring 5.3, followed at 6.41 p.m. The epicentre was located along the Sikkim-Nepal border, about 70 km off Sikkim's capital Gangtok.According to preliminary reports, Sandipan Banerjee, an official working with a pharmaceutical company, died in a house collapse at Rangpo, 40 km from Gangtok. Another person was killed when the vehicle in which he was travelling was trapped in a massive mudslide near Bortuk on the outskirts of Gangtok.
About 25 people were injured when an apartment block collapsed in the town of Rangpo, Prakash Adhikary, a journalist in Gangtok, told IANS."My driver is unable to reach Gangtok and is stuck some 20 km away as the road has been blocked with mudslides," businessman Rakesh Somani said on telephone from Gangtok.Another resident said at least a dozen houses had been damaged, with some roofs collapsing."We have reports of damage from places on the outskirts of Gangtok. Telecom lines are down and so it is very difficult to get information from the interior areas."Cracks developed in houses and roofs in Assam's main city Guwahati. Lifts collapsed in apartment blocks in the city."The apartment where we stay was literally swaying for close to about 50 seconds. We rushed out of our home in panic," said Anamika Das, a housewife in Guwahati."Our lift collapsed and some people were stuck inside," said Arindam Das, a Guwahati resident.
The eight northeastern states - Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Tripura, Sikkim, Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh and Manipur - are considered by seismologists as the sixth major quake-prone belt in the world.The region experienced one of the worst earthquakes, measuring 8.7 on the Richter Scale in 1897, leaving over 1,600 people dead.
The death toll in the powerful earthquake rose to 40 with 19 people being killed in Sikkim, five in West Bengal, seven each in Nepal and Tibet even as rescue and relief operations were today stepped up in the affected areas.Over a hundred people have been injured in the 6.8 magnitude tremblor which has caused extensive damage to buildings and roads in Sikkim and several other places. The casualties have occurred mostly in the North District and in towns and villages like Rangpo, Dikchu, Singtam and Chungthang located along the course of Teesta river, they said.In Gangtok, power was restored this morning. Residents had spent the night outside their houses fearing aftershocks. At least 20 aftershocks throughout the night had created panic in the city. Rescue teams have been dispatched to various affected areas this morning, the officials said. The toll in Sikkim till last night was seven. In West Bengal, the toll rose to five with reports reaching Kolkata saying that two deaths have occurred in
Kalimpong area in Darjeeling while one person each was killed in Siliguri and Jalpaiguri areas and one in a tea garden in Doors.Chinese state-run news agency Xinhua reported that at least seven persons have been killed and 22 others injured in Tibet in the quake which has caused landslides and has disrupted traffic, power and water supplies as well as telecommunication in Yadong County, an area 40 km away from Sikkim. Three people were killed at Lainchaur in Kathmandu, two in Sunsari district, and one each in Dhankuta and Sankhuwasabha districts in eastern Nepal, according to HomeMinistry sources in the Nepalese capital.
Many buildings in and around Gangtok have collapsed and around 85 per cent of structures and houses have developed cracks due to the quake that hit Sikkim and other areas last evening, they said. Most of the areas in north Sikkim have been cut-off from the rest of the country as roads were blocked and communication lines got snapped.The Sadar police station in Gangtok was badly damaged due to the tremor. All BSNL telephone landlines in the city have gone dead since last evening.
The epicentre of the quake - the biggest in two decades - was located at Mangan and Sakyong areas, over 50 km fromGangtok on the Sikkim-Nepal border.
I n Bihar, two persons were killed in Nalanda and Darbhanga districts, official sources said. A five-year-old girl and a youth were the two victims, they said. Tremors were also felt in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Chandigarh and Delhi. Four teams of National Disaster Response Force have been rushed to Sikkim and five more teams were being sent from Kolkata, Cabinet Secretary Ajit Kumar Seth told reporters last night after a meeting of top officials in Delhi convened on the direction of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. 'The Prime Minister himself is monitoring the developments connected to the quake,' Seth had said
Prof. John Kurakar
At least two people were killed and 25 injured Sunday,18th September,2011, in Sikkim after a 6.8 earthquake followed by two aftershocks shook the region, damaging houses and triggering mudslides.According to the Regional Seismological Centre in Shillong, the tremor was felt at 6.10 p.m. The first aftershock measuring 6.1 on the Richter Scale was experienced within 10 minutes. The second, measuring 5.3, followed at 6.41 p.m. The epicentre was located along the Sikkim-Nepal border, about 70 km off Sikkim's capital Gangtok.According to preliminary reports, Sandipan Banerjee, an official working with a pharmaceutical company, died in a house collapse at Rangpo, 40 km from Gangtok. Another person was killed when the vehicle in which he was travelling was trapped in a massive mudslide near Bortuk on the outskirts of Gangtok.
About 25 people were injured when an apartment block collapsed in the town of Rangpo, Prakash Adhikary, a journalist in Gangtok, told IANS."My driver is unable to reach Gangtok and is stuck some 20 km away as the road has been blocked with mudslides," businessman Rakesh Somani said on telephone from Gangtok.Another resident said at least a dozen houses had been damaged, with some roofs collapsing."We have reports of damage from places on the outskirts of Gangtok. Telecom lines are down and so it is very difficult to get information from the interior areas."Cracks developed in houses and roofs in Assam's main city Guwahati. Lifts collapsed in apartment blocks in the city."The apartment where we stay was literally swaying for close to about 50 seconds. We rushed out of our home in panic," said Anamika Das, a housewife in Guwahati."Our lift collapsed and some people were stuck inside," said Arindam Das, a Guwahati resident.
The eight northeastern states - Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Tripura, Sikkim, Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh and Manipur - are considered by seismologists as the sixth major quake-prone belt in the world.The region experienced one of the worst earthquakes, measuring 8.7 on the Richter Scale in 1897, leaving over 1,600 people dead.
The death toll in the powerful earthquake rose to 40 with 19 people being killed in Sikkim, five in West Bengal, seven each in Nepal and Tibet even as rescue and relief operations were today stepped up in the affected areas.Over a hundred people have been injured in the 6.8 magnitude tremblor which has caused extensive damage to buildings and roads in Sikkim and several other places. The casualties have occurred mostly in the North District and in towns and villages like Rangpo, Dikchu, Singtam and Chungthang located along the course of Teesta river, they said.In Gangtok, power was restored this morning. Residents had spent the night outside their houses fearing aftershocks. At least 20 aftershocks throughout the night had created panic in the city. Rescue teams have been dispatched to various affected areas this morning, the officials said. The toll in Sikkim till last night was seven. In West Bengal, the toll rose to five with reports reaching Kolkata saying that two deaths have occurred in
Kalimpong area in Darjeeling while one person each was killed in Siliguri and Jalpaiguri areas and one in a tea garden in Doors.Chinese state-run news agency Xinhua reported that at least seven persons have been killed and 22 others injured in Tibet in the quake which has caused landslides and has disrupted traffic, power and water supplies as well as telecommunication in Yadong County, an area 40 km away from Sikkim. Three people were killed at Lainchaur in Kathmandu, two in Sunsari district, and one each in Dhankuta and Sankhuwasabha districts in eastern Nepal, according to HomeMinistry sources in the Nepalese capital.
Many buildings in and around Gangtok have collapsed and around 85 per cent of structures and houses have developed cracks due to the quake that hit Sikkim and other areas last evening, they said. Most of the areas in north Sikkim have been cut-off from the rest of the country as roads were blocked and communication lines got snapped.The Sadar police station in Gangtok was badly damaged due to the tremor. All BSNL telephone landlines in the city have gone dead since last evening.
The epicentre of the quake - the biggest in two decades - was located at Mangan and Sakyong areas, over 50 km fromGangtok on the Sikkim-Nepal border.
I n Bihar, two persons were killed in Nalanda and Darbhanga districts, official sources said. A five-year-old girl and a youth were the two victims, they said. Tremors were also felt in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Chandigarh and Delhi. Four teams of National Disaster Response Force have been rushed to Sikkim and five more teams were being sent from Kolkata, Cabinet Secretary Ajit Kumar Seth told reporters last night after a meeting of top officials in Delhi convened on the direction of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. 'The Prime Minister himself is monitoring the developments connected to the quake,' Seth had said
Prof. John Kurakar
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