A 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck southern Mexico on Tuesday, killing six people, sending hundreds fleeing from their homes and forcing the closure of a major state-owned oil refinery.
Hundreds of aftershocks were reported in the hours following the initial tremor, which was felt in Mexico City, some 700km distant from the epicentre in Crucecita, in Oaxaca state.
“We had to leave because there is a risk that the market will collapse. We are hardly selling anything because of the pandemic and now if the market is closed we will have a worse time,” said Juana Martinez, 60, a flower-seller in Oaxaca city.
All the deaths occurred in Oaxaca, with the majority due to the collapse of buildings. A woman died near Crucecita, and five other people died in towns located within 150km of the epicentre, officials said.
The 7.4 quake struck at a depth of 23km, the US Geological Survey reported.
An initial tsunami warning was later reversed.
There was no damage reported to “strategic infrastructure” including ports, airports, refineries and hydroelectric plants, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said in a video published on social media.
Mexican Oil said its refinery in Salina Cruz in Oaxaca had been shut down as a precaution after a fire broke out at the plant “that was immediately stifled”.
One of the dead from the earthquake was a worker at the refinery, who was killed after falling off a high structure.
Other refineries in the state are operating as normal, Mexican Oil said.
Rescuers were battling to reach a remote area of the rugged state amid reports that 15 workers had become trapped while constructing a highway.
The quake also caused slight damage to four hospitals and a clinic, as well as to churches, markets and other buildings, authorities said.
Six hours after the quake, 447 aftershocks had been recorded across the region, the strongest at a magnitude of 4.6.
The US Pacific Tsunami warning centre initially said hazardous waves as high as three metres could strike anywhere within 1 000km of the quake’s epicentre, affecting the Pacific coast of Mexico and Central and South America.
Source:News24