-[News] Tsunami Hits South Pacific's Solomons
- From: "huongxuan" <Phoenix.Dream@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 2 Apr 2007 08:16:28 -0700
By George Herming, Associated Press Writer
3 hours ago
HONIARA, Solomon Islands - A bone-rattling undersea earthquake sparked
a tsunami that sent 10-foot-high waves crashing into parts of the
Solomon Islands on Monday, wiping out one village and killing at least
13 people. The death toll was expected to rise.
Large waves struck the western town of Gizo, inundating buildings and
causing widespread destruction within five minutes of the earthquake.
"There wasn't any warning _ the warning was the earth tremors," Alex
Lokopio, the premier of the Solomon's Western Province, told New
Zealand's National Radio. "It shook us very, very strongly and we were
frightened, and all of a sudden the sea was rising up."
Despite initial regionwide warnings, there was no repeat of the
massive 2004 tsunami, when a magnitude 9 quake sent massive waves
slamming into the coastlines of a dozen countries around the Indian
Ocean's rim, killing or leaving missing about 230,000 people.
Julian Makaa, spokesman for the Solomons National Disaster Management
Office, said numerous villages in the country's remote west were
reporting people being swept away as waves plowed through their
communities.
Reports remained sketchy because communications were reduced in many
cases to scratchy two-way radio lines. Emergency officials have yet to
be able to reach the area hit by the tsunami and communications with
the area is limited.
Alfred Maesulia, the information director in Prime Minister Manasseh
Sogavare's office, said late Monday that 13 people had been killed and
an unknown number were still missing.
"Some people were seen floating on the sea during the big waves but it
was very difficult to go near them," Maesulia told The Associated
Press. "The number at the moment is 13. It's possible that number will
increase, maybe double up or even more."
Lokopio said he witnessed a large wave crashing into the island.
"I saw the wave ... all of a sudden the water was just rising up and
moved toward the island and hit all the houses on the coastal area,
and all of their property was washed away to the open sea," he said.
Julian McLeod of the Solomon Islands National Disaster Management
Office said there were unconfirmed reports that two villages in the
country's far west were flooded.
National police spokesman Mick Spinks said "our biggest problem is
communications, because most of the high frequency radio system there
was submerged."
Gizo resident Judith Kennedy said water "right up to your head" swept
through the town.
"All the houses near the sea were flattened," she told The Associated
Press by telephone. "The downtown area is a very big mess from the
tsunami and the earthquake," she added. "A lot of houses have
collapsed. The whole town is still shaking" from aftershocks.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake measured magnitude-8.0 and
struck at 7:39 a.m. about 6 miles beneath the sea floor, 217 miles
northwest of the capital, Honiara.
The Pacific region from Australia to Hawaii went on high alert for
several hours after the quake struck between the islands of
Bougainville and New Georgia.
Gizo, a regional center, is just 25 miles from the earthquake's
epicenter.
Another witness in the town, dive shop owner Danny Kennedy, Judith's
father, estimated the height of the wave at 10 feet.
"I'm driving down the street _ there are boats in the middle of the
road, buildings have completely collapsed and fallen down," he said in
a telephone interview.
"We're just trying to mobilize water and food, and shelter for people
at the moment because ... in the town alone there's going to be
between 2,000-3,000 homeless. It's not a very good scene at the
moment."
Maesulia said deaths and widespread destruction was also reported on
Simbo, Choiseul and Ranunga islands near Gizo.
"There are reports that some villages were completely washed away," he
said. "Sasamungga village is quite a big village ... it was reported
that 300 houses were completely destroyed in that village alone."
Harry Wickham, who owns a waterfront hotel in Gizo, said the damage
was widespread.
"The waves came up probably about 10 feet and swept through town," he
told Australia's Nine Network television by telephone. "There's a lot
of water damage and a lot of debris floating around," he added.
"Ten feet of water washing through town _ you can imagine what damage
it has done here."
A town in the west, Munda, was believed to be badly damaged, officials
and the Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corp. said, but details were not
confirmed.
Solomon Islands deputy police commissioner Peter Marshall said an
airplane was to fly over the devastated areas later Monday to assess
damage. He said a national state of emergency has been declared.
The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center reported the quake at
magnitude 8.1, and said a temblor of that strength could cause a
destructive tsunami and issued a warning bulletin for the Solomon
Islands and neighboring Papua New Guinea. The alert was later lifted,
and no reports of a wider tsunami or damage elsewhere emerged.
Australian officials closed beaches anyway along the length of the
country's east coast, from near the Great Barrier Reef in the north to
Sydney and it's famous Bondi beach in the south. Ferry services in the
city were canceled.
It ordered a lower-level "tsunami watch" for other places, including
most South Pacific countries, but later canceled the alert. The center
said a 6-inch wave had been reported in Honiara.
Police Sgt. Godfrey Abiah said in Honiara that police in Gizo had
received warning about a possible tsunami and were helping people
leave the town for higher ground when the wave hit.
"We have lost radio contact with the two police stations down there
and we're not getting any clear picture from down there," he told the
AP by telephone.
A spokesman for Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, Deli Oso, said the
quake was felt in Honiara but there were no reports of any damage.
The Solomon Islands is a poverty-wracked archipelago of more than 200
islands northeast of Australia, with a population of about 552,000
people, that lies on the Pacific Basin's so-called "Ring of Fire," an
arc of volcanos and fault lines where quakes frequently happen.
.
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