Mexico earthquake kills at least 34 and is felt by 50 million people across country
Officials in Mexico are scrambling to respond to a 8.1 magnitude earthquake off the country’s southern coast that has killed 34 people and triggered tremors across the region.
The most powerful earthquake to strike in around 100 years saw with tremors reported from Mexico City to San Salvador to the south.
Evacuations, massive damage to infrastructure, and alerts were triggered as far away as south-east Asia.
The epicentre was 74 miles (119 km) into the Pacific Ocean, approximately 600 miles southeast of Mexico City, at a depth of 43 miles.
Jana Pursely, a geophysicist at the US Geological Survey, told CNN that the quake was relatively shallow, which resulted in more “intense shaking”.
Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto said between the initial quake and aftershocks at least 50 million people of the country’s 120 million population felt it.
It hit as most residents were sound asleep around midnight on Thursday night, forcing many out into the streets in their nightclothes, uncertain of where to go as everything around them appeared to be on the brink of collapse.
In Oaxaca alone, the state closest to the epicentre, Governor Alejandro Murat has reported 23 dead.
At least 17 of those people were in the state’s capital of Juchitan, where the town hall, hotels and bars now lay in rubble along the streets.
Juchitan Mayor Gloria Sanchez said: “The situation is Juchitan is critical; this is the most terrible moment in its history.”
There are reports of at least four people being trapped in a hotel that was damaged in the earthquake as well.
Chiapas, the other state bordering the epicentre, reported several collapsed homes and three dead.
In Tabasco, two children were reported dead as a result of a crumbling building.
However, the death toll appears to be less than a devastating 1985 earthquake that killed almost 10,000 people in four Mexican states though it was not nearly as powerful.
That quake was more deadly because it had hit much closer to Mexico City, one of the world’s most densely populated cities.
As Mexico deals with the infrastructure damage, only fully known in the harsh daylight, there was also a tsunami set off by the ocean-based earthquake.
Though the waves seem to have only reached approximately three feet, the National Weather Service’s Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said they could reach up to 10 ft.
Nevertheless, Mr Peña Nieto said operations at the Salina Cruz refinery close to the epicentre have been suspended and Pemex, the state-owned petroleum company, is conducting reviews of operations.
Though the damage is less severe than expected for such a massive quake, at least one million have been left without power in various neighbourhoods Mexico City alone and the airport reported shattered windows.
A full minute of tremors even rocked the city’s Angel of Independence monument as one Twitter user’s video shows.