A strong earthquake centered in the restive Russian region of Chechnya killed at least 13 people, injured more than 100 others and caused widespread havoc on Saturday, officials said.
The quake, which struck at around noon, reverberated through the Caucasus mountains, causing severe damage to infrastructure including roads, power supplies and communications, Russian news agencies reported.
Measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale according to Strasbourg observatory estimates, it was felt in five regions of the Russian north Caucasus and as far away as Georgia and Armenia.
The road infrastructure was seriously damaged across large swathes of Chechnya, the region’s deputy roads minister Yakha Makhmatkhadzhieva told Interfax news agency.
“Twelve victims died in the districts of Gudermes, Shali and Kurchaloy” in eastern Chechnya, a health ministry spokesman said.
“It is not excluded that the toll is going to rise further,” the official added.
The toll was later updated to 13 by the emergency situations ministry, which said three children were among the dead.
Chechen deputy emergency situations minister Akhmed Dzheirkhanov said four corpses had been found in the Kurchaloy district and one in Gudermes.
One was a soldier who died when a wall collapsed, the news agencies said.
Some 52,000 people from three Chechen districts were left without electricity, according to the Russian emergency situations ministry, cited by Interfax.
The Russian ministry later dispatched a rescue team of several dozen people on a plane from Moscow to lead the search for survivors and coordinate the relief effort, Interfax said.
Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov said he had ordered the creation of a special commission to assess the needs of people following the earthquake.
“We have received information on damage from various districts ... each and every [victim] will receive the necessary help and support,” Interfax quoted him as saying.
The US Geological Institute, which put the strength of the quake at 5.3 on the Richter scale, said its epicenter was 40km east of the Chechen capital Grozny, and 10km underground.
In Gudermes, residents living in high apartment buildings left their homes briefly due to fear of aftershocks, RIA Novosti news agency reported.
In addition to Chechnya, the earthquake was felt in Dagestan, North Ossetia, Ingushetia and in the Stavropol region.
“The underground shock was quite strong and people felt it in the streets of Vladikavkaz,” a witness in the North Ossetian city was quoted by Interfax as saying.
In Tbilisi, Georgian Interior Ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili said the earthquake was recorded near the Georgian border but added that there had been no damage or injuries there.
In Yerevan, a spokesman for Armenia’s seismology center said two small quakes were registered in the north of the country, but no damages or injuries reported.
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