'Utter devastation' after major quake,
aftershocks hit New Zealand
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[November 14, 2016]
By Charlotte Greenfield and Greg Stutchbury
WELLINGTON (Reuters) - A powerful 7.8
magnitude earthquake pummeled central New Zealand early on Monday,
killing at least two people, damaging roads and buildings and setting
off hundreds of strong aftershocks.
Emergency response teams flew by helicopter to the region at the
epicenter of the tremor, which struck just after midnight some 91 km (57
miles) northeast of Christchurch in the South Island, amid reports of
injuries and collapsed buildings.
"It's just utter devastation, I just don't know ... that's months of
work," New Zealand Prime Minister John Key told Civil Defence Minister
Gerry Brownlee after flying over the coastal town of Kaikoura, according
to Brownlee's Twitter account.
He described landslips in the area as "just horrendous". In a statement
seen by Reuters, Key said of the likely damage bill: "You’ve got to
believe it’s in the billions of dollars to resolve."
Powerlines and telecommunications were down, with huge cracks in roads,
land slips and other damage to infrastructure making it hard to reach
the worst-affected areas.
A tsunami warning that led to mass evacuations after the original quake
was downgraded after large swells hit New Zealand's capital Wellington,
in the North Island, and Christchurch.
Wellington was a virtual ghost town with workers ordered to stay away
while the city council assessed the risk to buildings, several of which
were damaged by the tremor. There were concerns that loose glass and
masonry could be dislodged by severe weather hitting the capital, with
140 km per hour (85 mph) winds forecast.
Hundreds of aftershocks, the strongest a 6.2 quake at about 1.45 p.m.
local time (0045 GMT), rattled the South Pacific country, fraying nerves
in an area where memories of a deadly 2011 quake are still fresh.
Christchurch, the largest city on New Zealand's ruggedly beautiful South
Island, is still recovering from the 6.3 quake in 2011 that killed 185
people.
New Zealand's Civil Defence declared a state of emergency for the
Kaikoura region, centered on a tourist town about 150 km (90 miles)
northeast of Christchurch, soon after Monday's large aftershock.
Kaikoura, a popular spot for whale watching, appeared to have borne the
brunt of the quake.
"Our immediate priority is ensuring delivery of clean water, food and
other essentials to the residents of Kaikoura and the estimated 1,000
tourists in the town," Brownlee said.
The Navy's multi-role vessel HMNZS Canterbury was heading to the area,
he said.
Urban Search and Rescue (USAR) said a 20-person rescue team and two
sniffer dogs had arrived in the town. A second team was on standby in
Christchurch, USAR said in a statement.
Police in the area around Christchurch reported 19 burglaries of homes
and commercial properties after the quake as residents headed for higher
ground.
"It is extremely disappointing that at a time when people are facing
such a traumatic event and communities are coming together to support
one another, there are others who are only interested in taking
advantage,” Canterbury District Commander Superintendent John Price said
in a statement.
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Local residents Chris and Viv Young look at damage caused by an
earthquake along State Highway One, south of the township of
Blenheim on New Zealand's South Island, November 14, 2016.
REUTERS/Anthony Phelps
TWIN QUAKES
Hours after the quake, officials said a slip dam caused by the
quakes that had blocked the Clarence River north of the town had
breached, sending a wall of water downstream.
A group of kayakers missing on the river was later reported safe.
New Zealand's Geonet measured Monday's first quake at magnitude 7.5,
while the U.S. Geological Survey put it at 7.8. The quakes and
aftershocks rattled buildings and woke residents across the country,
hundreds of kilometers from the epicenter.
Geonet said four faults had ruptured, with one at the coast
appearing to have slipped as much as 10 meters (33 feet).
Government research unit GNS Science said the overnight tremor
appeared to have been two simultaneous quakes which together lasted
more than two minutes.
New Zealand lies in the seismically active "Ring of Fire", a 40,000
km arc of volcanoes and oceanic trenches that partly encircles the
Pacific Ocean. Around 90 percent of the world's earthquakes occur
within this region.
Stock exchange operator NZX Ltd said markets traded normally,
although many offices in the capital were closed. The New Zealand
dollar initially fell to a one-month low before mostly recovering.
Fonterra, the world's biggest dairy exporter, said some its farms
were without power and would likely have to dump milk.
Prime Minister Key postponed a trip to Argentina, where he had
planned to hold a series of trade meetings ahead of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) leaders' summit in Peru this week, as he
met disaster officials.
At least one of those killed was found in a house in Kaikoura that
"collapsed like a stack of cards", Kaikoura Hospital's Dr
Christopher Henry told Fairfax media. Two other people were pulled
alive from the same building.
New Zealand media reported one of the pilots taking rescuers to the
area was Richie McCaw, the recently retired captain of New Zealand's
world champion All Blacks rugby team.
"At one point, the railway was way out over the sea - it had been
pushed out by (land) slips. It would not have been a nice place to
be at midnight last night," McCaw told the New Zealand Herald after
helping fly the USAR team to Kaikoura.
(Additional reporting by Greg Stutchbury in WELLINGTON, Jamie Freed,
Wayne Cole and Jane Wardell in SYDNEY; Writing by Paul Tait; Editing
by Lincoln Feast)
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