Venezuela hit by massive magnitude 7.3 earthquake

  • 22/08/2018
Venezuela hit by massive magnitude 7.3 earthquake
Photo credit: Getty

A major earthquake of magnitude 7.3 has struck Venezuela's eastern coast, home to largely poor fishing communities, and shook buildings in Caracas, Colombian capital Bogota, and on islands in the Caribbean.

There were no immediate reports of injuries, Venezuelan Interior Minister Nestor Reverol said in an internet broadcast. But worried Venezuelans with relatives close to the epicentre said they were struggling to contact their family members due to shaky phone lines.

The quake hit just as the oil-rich nation is wrestling with a crippling economic crisis. Medicine is running short, hospitals are barely functioning and there are severe shortages of basics like chicken and milk.

It was not immediately clear if there was any damage to Venezuela's oil industry, which oversees the world's biggest crude reserves. State oil company PDVSA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The US Pacific Tsunami Center cancelled an earlier warning of a possible tsunami along the coast near the epicentre, some 190 kilometres from Cumana, the capital of the eastern state of Sucre.

In Venezuela's picturesque palm tree-dotted northern coast, residents said the long quake was terrifying. The tremor made residents nauseous, caused lamps to swing and led people to dash into the streets.

"I had gotten into bed to watch the news on TV and my bed started to move as if it was made of water," said Elia Sanchez, a doctor in Cumana. "We had to go down nine floors, it felt like it would never end."

The quake was also felt in capital Caracas, where residents rushed out of office buildings, as well as in nearby island nations like Trinidad and Tobago, and St. Lucia, to the west and north. Residents in Trinidad and Tobago shared video online showing some damage to buildings.

USGS geophysicist Jessica Turner said the quake's depth, 123 kilometres below the surface, would dampen some of the shaking but not enough to prevent damage.

Reuters