Aftershocks rock South Island
HUNDREDS of tourists and residents were evacuated from a small South Island town amid more strong aftershocks in New Zealand yesterday, a day after a powerful earthquake killed two people.
The 7.8-magnitude tremor struck just after midnight on Sunday, destroying farm homesteads, sending glass and masonry toppling from buildings in the capital, Wellington, and cutting road and rail links throughout the northeast of South Island.
As aftershocks continued to rattle the region, emergency services cordoned off streets in Wellington and evacuated several buildings due to fears one of them might collapse.
Wellington Mayor Justin Lester said the vacant building appeared to have suffered structural damage when the land it was on subsided in the quake. A fire service official said a major structural beam had “snapped like a bone.”
The town of Kaikoura, a popular base for whale-watching about 150 kilometers northeast of Christchurch, the South Island’s main city, remained cut off by massive landslides.
Four defense force helicopters flew in to the town yesterday morning and two Navy vessels were heading to the area carrying supplies and to assist with the evacuation, Air Commander Darryn Webb, acting commander of New Zealand joint forces, told TVNZ.
“We’re looking to do as many flights as we can out of Kaikoura today,” he said.
Around 400 of the 1,200 tourists stranded in the town were flown out yesterday, including 12 people who had a variety of injuries, officials said.
The Red Cross, which used defense force helicopters to bring in water, along with emergency generators and satellite communications, said supplies in the town were running out.
Mark Solomon, a leader of South Island indigenous Maori Ngai Tahu tribe, which has tourism and fisheries businesses around Kaikoura, said the local marae (Maori meeting place) had received 1,000 people since Monday morning.
Many slept overnight in the communal hall or in vehicles outside.
The tribe had fed them with crayfish, a delicacy for which the South Island town is famous. With no power, the tanks that hold the expensive crustaceans had stopped pumping.
“It’s better to use the food than throw it in the rubbish so we sent it up to the marae to feed people,” Solomon told reporters.
China chartered four helicopters to evacuate around 40 nationals from Kaikoura, mostly elderly and children, late on Monday, said Liu Lian, an official at the Chinese Consulate in Christchurch.
One Chinese national had been treated for a minor head injury in Kaikoura’s hospital, Liu said, and around 60 others were being evacuated yesterday.
“They have been trapped in Kaikoura for a couple of days, some are maybe scared, they have some mental stress,” Liu said.
New Zealand lies in the seismically active “Ring of Fire,” a 40,000-kilometer arc of volcanoes and oceanic trenches that encircles much of the Pacific Ocean.
Christchurch is still recovering from a 6.3-magnitude quake in 2011 that killed 185 people.
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