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Quake will hit recovery, says NZ premier
NEW Zealand's prime minister warned yesterday that the country's economic recovery will be hurt by the weekend's powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake that smashed buildings and wrecked roads and rail lines in the city of Christchurch.
The after-effects of the temblor are still coming to light. Residents in a new subdivision in a southern suburb were evacuated yesterday from their houses, which became mired in deep layers of silt that spewed from the soft ground as it turned to liquid under pressure from the quake.
"We thought we were having a tsunami," said home-owner Lalita Sharma. "We stepped outside into knee-high liquid. We thought the house would sink."
Mounds of sand covered front lawns and driveways, and some houses had been ripped from their foundations. A driveway that had sloped upward from the road was now flat, the rose garden buried in sand.
Army troops have taken control of central Christchurch to help police secure streets and badly damaged businesses in the worst-hit center of the city. The area remained cordoned off and under nighttime curfew, with only building and business owners allowed access.
"There will be considerable disruption to the (regional) and national economy in the short term," but activity should pick up as reconstruction gains momentum, Prime Minister John Key said. The country's economy has now recorded two quarters of minor growth after struggling to escape 18 months of recession.
The quake struck at 4:35am on Saturday near the South Island city of 400,000 people, ripping open a new fault line in the earth's surface, destroying hundreds of buildings and cutting power to the region. No one was killed, and only two serious injuries were reported.
Key, who toured the city's damaged areas over the weekend, said 430 houses and another 70 buildings, many of them older structures, were already earmarked for demolition because of damage caused by the quake. Around 100,000 of the region's 160,000 homes had sustained some damage, he said.
A quake-damaged building partially collapsed into a suburban street yesterday and officials took urgent steps to bulldoze and remove it.
There were no injuries reported.
The after-effects of the temblor are still coming to light. Residents in a new subdivision in a southern suburb were evacuated yesterday from their houses, which became mired in deep layers of silt that spewed from the soft ground as it turned to liquid under pressure from the quake.
"We thought we were having a tsunami," said home-owner Lalita Sharma. "We stepped outside into knee-high liquid. We thought the house would sink."
Mounds of sand covered front lawns and driveways, and some houses had been ripped from their foundations. A driveway that had sloped upward from the road was now flat, the rose garden buried in sand.
Army troops have taken control of central Christchurch to help police secure streets and badly damaged businesses in the worst-hit center of the city. The area remained cordoned off and under nighttime curfew, with only building and business owners allowed access.
"There will be considerable disruption to the (regional) and national economy in the short term," but activity should pick up as reconstruction gains momentum, Prime Minister John Key said. The country's economy has now recorded two quarters of minor growth after struggling to escape 18 months of recession.
The quake struck at 4:35am on Saturday near the South Island city of 400,000 people, ripping open a new fault line in the earth's surface, destroying hundreds of buildings and cutting power to the region. No one was killed, and only two serious injuries were reported.
Key, who toured the city's damaged areas over the weekend, said 430 houses and another 70 buildings, many of them older structures, were already earmarked for demolition because of damage caused by the quake. Around 100,000 of the region's 160,000 homes had sustained some damage, he said.
A quake-damaged building partially collapsed into a suburban street yesterday and officials took urgent steps to bulldoze and remove it.
There were no injuries reported.
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