Mayor: Quake hit city ‘like an iceberg’

Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker is thankful there has been no loss of life but there had been considerable damage across the city and outlying areas.

The city has been left devastated after a massive 7.1 magnitude earthquake struck 30km west of the city at 4.35am this morning.

The quake was at a depth of 33km and was centred near Darfield, and has left large parts of the area without power, water or telephones.

Mr Parker said he did not want to overstate the level of damage “but I think it’s like an iceberg. There is, in a sense, below the visible line significant structural damage.”
CCID: 16375

“There would not be a house or a family in our city that has not in some way had damage done to their person and or their property,” Mr Parker said.

“Our thoughts are with our people.

“We know that a lot of people will be very nervous, deeply disturbed.”

Scientists have described this morning’s earthquake as the most significant since the 1931 magnitude 7.8 Hawke’s Bay earthquake.

Mr Parker said electricity was being slowly restored to the city but there were still concerns about the situation with water and waste water.

Mr Parker said the inner city was being closed down, city residents are being asked to save water and not flush the toilet, not to go to “rubbernecking”, and check on their neighbours.

Mr Parker said the worst problems seem to be centred in the city’s eastern suburbs and rural areas in outlying Christchurch.

State of emergency

Civil Defence declared a state of emergency around 10am this morning.

New Brighton and other seaside areas are bracing for possible evacuation.

Prime Minister John Key has travelled to the area.

Christchurch Hospital inundated

Christchurch Hospital siad two men have been seriously injured by the earthquake.

One man in his 50s is in a serious condition in intensive care at Christchurch Hospital after a chimney collapsed on him.

Another man, also in his 50s, was seriously injured by falling glass.
The main Christchurch Hospital is being inundated by residents arriving with broken limbs, bruises and cuts.

A spokeswoman, Michelle Hider, asked residents with minor injuries to go to 24-hour surgeries for treatment rather than the hospital.

Christchurch Airport closed

All flights to Christchurch have been cancelled until at least 1pm. All flights from Auckland to Christchurch once flights resume are booked out.

Residents desperate for emergency supplies

Panicked residents have been queuing to buy water as uncertainty surrounds the stricken city’s water supply.

But many businesses are unable to open their doors as the massive cleanup gets underway.

Nigel Bond, owner of the New World on Colombo Mall says he could barely see the floor of the supermarket this morning for stock, much of it now unusable. His staff have been working to clean up damaged stock since 5.30am.

“Unfortunately our big water shelf has collapsed and most of that stock has been lost,” he told nzherald.co.nz.

“There’s a bit of structural damage, like cracks in the floor and fallen ceiling tiles. Nearly everything’s on the floor. Red wine, olive oil, you name it – it’s not pretty.”

Buildings, roads devastated across Christchurch

Street surfaces have risen up into a peak in the middle of a Christchurch road, while craters in the road have filled with water from ruptured mains. People in vehicles are trying to avoid them.

Among the affected streets are Hills Rd in Shirley and others in the suburb of St Albans and New Brighton.

In other areas roads have been blocked by debris after several buildings collapsed onto the streets, leaving their interiors visible and the central city resembling a war zone.

Large groups of onlookers have gathered to survey the damage and take pictures with their cameras and mobile phones.

Several large aftershocks have already struck the region, and wardens dressed in high-visibility gear are asking people to stay well clear of buildings because of the high risk of further collapses.

The city centre is now officially closed.

Traffic lights are still not working in several places around the central city, creating gridlock as the traffic flow increases.

Mayor ask residents to conserve water

Mayor Bob Parker has asked residents to conserve water.

Mr Parker has warned residents not to flush the toilet and to conserve water. There are fears the sewerage system has been damaged.

Engineers have been checking the city’s priority infrastructure.

Mr Parker urged Cantabrians affected by the earthquake to check on their neighbours to ensure they were safe.

Personal accounts: Residents ‘lucky to be alive’

Marsha Witehira, 30, was rescued by friend Tama Wharepapa, who literally pulled her to safety by her feet as a wall in her bedroom collapsed around her.

“It just missed my head,” Ms Witehira said. “I’m very lucky to be alive. If Tama wasn’t here to wake me from my sleep and pull me out, I really wouldn’t like to think what the result would be.”

Knee Doherty was asleep in her central Christchurch home when the building next door collapsed.

“We didn’t even notice the movement as much as the noise,” she said. “The back of the house is pretty much gone. All the house next door is gone. It was just a massive noise.”

‘A scary sight to see’

New Zealand Herald reporter Jarrod Booker,who lives in the central Christchurch suburb of Linwood, said he was woken by “extremely violent shaking.”

He said the chimney from his next door neighbour’s house had fallen and smashed through a car’s windscreen.

“There have been a number of aftershocks of a much lesser degree since then.”

Mr Booker’s partner, Kineta Knight, said it was a scary sight to see.

“The scariest thing was the quake just felt like it would never end. It wasn’t a sharp, sudden jolt. It was like being on a rollercoaster.

“Things were smashing everywhere, we could hear glass breaking.”

Newstalk ZB reporter Craig Kerr spoke to Auckland host Pat Brittenden from the Christchurch office, which he said had sustained damage.

“Basically, the place is destroyed. Desks that were standing up are flattened against the ground. The filing cabinets are tipped over. The lifts in the building are obviously out of action.”

“The building just along the road from us here has been flattened – it’s on the ground,” he said.

A Timaru resident told NZPA he was awakened by the shaking. His house was groaning and a bedside lamp crashed off its table.

- NZ HERALD STAFF / NZPA

Tags: Aftershocks, Bob Parker, Cern, City Residents, Civil Defence, Damag, Darfield, Earthquake, Eastern Suburbs, Electricity, Falling Glass, Fri, Hawke, John Key, Lt, Magnitude Earthquake, Mayor Bob, Mr Parker, New Brighton, Outlying Areas, Power Water, Prime Minister John, Quake, Scientists, Seaside Areas, Siad, State Of Emergency, Visible Line, Waste Water

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Icelandic volcano still spewing huge ash plume

Icelandic volcano still spewing huge ash plume
Reuters
An aerial handout photo from the Icelandic Coast Guard shows a plume of steam rising 22,000 feet (6700 meters) from a crater under about 656 feet (200 Reuters – An aerial handout photo from the Icelandic Coast Guard shows a plume of steam rising 22,000 feet (6700 …

* Iceland volcano erupts Slideshow:Iceland volcano erupts
* Iceland volcano cloud brings European air chaos Play Video Video:Iceland volcano cloud brings European air chaos AFP
* Raw Video: Ash cloud disrupts air travel Play Video Video:Raw Video: Ash cloud disrupts air travel AP

Fri Apr 16, 8:51 am ET

REYKJAVIK (Reuters) – An Icelandic volcano is still spewing ash into the air in a massive plume that has disrupted air traffic across Europe and shows little sign of letting up, officials said on Friday.

One expert said the eruption at the volcano, about 120 km (75 miles) southeast of capital Reykjavik, could abate in the coming days, but a government spokesman said ash would keep drifting into the skies of Europe.

The thick, dark brown ash cloud that shot several kilometers (miles) into the air and has drifted away from the north Atlantic island has shut down air traffic across northern Europe and restrictions remained in place in many areas.

Norway and Sweden said they would resume limited flights in their northern areas, but Poland and the Czech Republic joined the list of countries with closed airports.

“It is more or less the same situation as yesterday, it is still erupting, still exploding, still producing gas,” University of Iceland professor Armann Hoskuldsson told Reuters.

“We expect it to last for two days or more or something. It cannot continue at this rate for many days. There is a limited amount of magma that can spew out,” he added, saying it was the magma, or molten rock beneath the Earth’s surface, coming out of the volcano that turned into ash.

Environment Ministry spokesman Gudmundur Gudmundsson said no variation was expected in the outflow of ash.

“The eruption is ongoing and we are not expecting any change in the production of ash…High level winds will keep dispersing the plume over Europe,” he said.

The eruption has taken place under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, normally a popular hiking ground in southern Iceland.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Urdur Gudmundsdottir said there was some damage to roads and barriers protecting farms.

“There is still an evacuation of around 20 farms, which is 40 to 50 people,” she added, noting this was less than the 800 people who had been evacuated earlier this week.

FLOODS

People living close to the eruption said the main impact on their lives was the flood waters running off the glacier, which have closed roads.

“Obviously it’s all been a bit unreal. One is just managing from day to day and doing one’s best,” said Hanna Lara Andrews, a resident of a farm at the foot of the mountain, who had traveled to Reykjavijk with her one-year-old son.

Speaking by telephone, she said she and her family had felt a big earthquake last week. When the eruption came this week they could see a big white cloud and then ash forming behind it.

Another professor said on Thursday that the heat had melted up to a third of the glacial ice covering the crater, causing a nearby river to burst its banks.

Icelandic radio said part of the ring road that goes around the small north Atlantic island had been swept away.

To the east of the volcano, thousands of hectares of land are covered by a thick layer of ash.

The cloud of ash from the eruption has hit air travel all over northern Europe, with flights grounded or diverted due to the risk of engine damage from sucking in particles of ash from the volcanic cloud.

The volcano under the Ejfjallajokull glacier, Iceland’s fifth largest glacier, has erupted five times since Iceland was settled in the ninth century.

Iceland sits on a volcanic hotspot in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and has relatively frequent eruptions, although most occur in sparsely populated areas and pose little danger to people or property. Before March, the last eruption took place in 2004.

(Reporting by Omar Valdimarsson in Reykkavik and Patrick Lannin in Stockholm; writing by Patrick Lannin; Editing by William Maclean)

Tags: Air Traffic, Armann, Ash Cloud, Ash Plume, Brown Ash, Capital Reykjavik, Fri, Government Spokesman, Gudmundur Gudmundsson, Iceland Volcano, Kilometers Miles, List Of Countries, Magma, Massive Plume, Ministry Spokesman, Molten Rock, Northern Areas, Northern Europe, Reuters, University Of Iceland

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