Around 180 people have been killed following two earthquakes in northwest Iran.
The two strong quakes struck towns and villages in northwest Iran in quick succession on Saturday, killing at least 180 people and injuring more than 1,000, according to a preliminary toll by officials.
Khalil Sa’ie, a provincial official, said 180 people had been killed and some 1,300 injured.
Gholamreza Masoumi, the head of Iran’s emergency services, said those hurt were being taken to hospitals in Tabriz and Ardebil, the two biggest nearby major cities, both of which escaped relatively unscathed by the quakes.
The quakes measured 6.2 and 6.0 on the moment magnitude scale, according to Tehran University’s Seismological Centre, but the US Geological Survey, which monitors seismic activity worldwide, ranked them as more powerful than that, at 6.4 and 6.3, respectively.
“Sixty villages… have been heavily damaged and are in need of help,” said Abbas Fallah, an MP in the hard-hit town of Ahar.
The coroner for Ahar, Mohammad Zargari, told the Fars news agency that in that area “so far 20 people have lost their lives… (but) it is estimated the number will reach 40.”
The provincial chief coroner, Bahram Samadi-Rad, said another 30 dead were counted in Varazqan, another town that was badly shaken.
“So far 30 corpses from the quake-hit town of Varazqan have been given to the coroner’s office,” he said.
Allahverdi Dehqani, a politician in Varazqan, confirmed that “most of the villages around Varazqan have been damaged.”
Residents in the region panicked as their homes shook around them when the quakes hit, sending them fleeing into the streets for safety, according to reports.
Telephone communications were cut for hours, forcing rescue personnel to use radios and to send helicopters to some of the villages to assess the extent of the disaster.
Rescue operations were continuing into the night.
Tehran University’s Seismological Centre said the first earthquake hit at 4:53 pm (1223 GMT) with an epicentre just 40 miles from Tabriz, close to the town of Ahar, and a depth of six miles.
The second – a big aftershock – rumbled through just 11 minutes later from nearly the same spot. A series of 17 smaller aftershocks rating 4.7 or below rapidly followed.
Iran sits astride several major fault lines and is prone to frequent earthquakes, some of which have been devastating.
The deadliest was a 6.6-magnitude quake which struck the southern city of Bam in December 2003, killing 31,000 people – about a quarter of the population – and destroying the city’s ancient mud-built citadel.