Croatia earthquake: At least seven killed and 26 injured in 6.3-magnitude tremor
Rescuers pull man and boy from car buried under rubble in town of Petrinja
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A major earthquake of magnitude 6.3 hit Croatia, killing at least seven people – including a 12-year-old girl – and causing widespread damage in a town near the capital, Zagreb.
Firefighters rescued a man and a boy trapped in a car buried in rubble in Petrinja after buildings collapsed, leaving the streets littered with fallen bricks and covered in dust.
Officials said a 12-year-old girl died in Petrinja, a town of some 25,000 people. Another six people were killed in nearly destroyed villages close to the town, according to HRT state television. At least 26 people were hospitalised, six with serious injuries, officials said, adding that many more people remained unaccounted for.
“My town has been completely destroyed. We have dead children,” the town’s mayor, Darinko Dumbovic, said in a statement to HRT.
“This is like Hiroshima – half of the city no longer exists. The city has been demolished, the city is no longer liveable. We need help.”
The Croatian military was deployed in Petrinja to help with the rescue operation and the Croatian Red Cross described the situation as “very serious” as it dispatched crisis teams to the area.
Croatia’s prime minister, Andrej Plenkovic, travelled to the town to oversee the efforts to accommodate homeless residents in local hotels and army barracks after what he described as a "devastating earthquake which was felt in many parts of Croatia”.
He tweeted: “We mobilised all available services to help people and clear the destroyed parts. The most important thing now is to save human lives.”
The European Mediterranean Seismological Centre said the centre of the quake was 51km southeast of Zagreb and it was the largest to hit Croatia this year. It was the 14th felt in the area in the last 31 hours including a 5.2-magnitude tremor on Monday.
Tomislav Fabijanic, head of emergency medical services in Sisak, a city close to Petrinja, said there were many injured in the region.
“There are fractures, there are concussions and some had to be operated on,” he said.
In Zagreb, people ran out into the streets and parks in fear and there were reports of several leaving the city despite a travel ban due to the coronavirus outbreak. The tremor was also felt in neighbouring Bosnia and Serbia, and Slovenia's STA news agency said that the country’s sole nuclear power plant was shut down as a precaution.
In March, an earthquake of magnitude 5.3 hit Zagreb causing one death and injuring 27 people. That was said to be the biggest tremor to hit Zagreb in 140 years.
The European Council president, Charles Michel, said the EU was offering its “full support and assistance”. He tweeted: "We are closely following the situation in Zagreb following the devastating earthquake.
“Our thoughts go out to the injured and frontline workers.”
Additional reporting by agencies
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