16 dead, 250 injured in Tanzania earthquake

DAR ES SALAAM - At least 16 people died and 253 were injured in a 5.7-magnitude earthquake that struck northwest Tanzania, local authorities said Sunday.

As rescuers scrambled to find survivors from the Saturday quake, premier Kassim Majaliwa headed to the worst-hit city, Bukoba, to attend a mourning ceremony at its stadium. President John Magufuli, who is from the region, said he was “deeply saddened.”

Salum Kijuu, governor of Kagera province where Bukoba is located, told AFP “the current toll is 16 dead, 253 injured, 840 buildings destroyed, including 44 public buildings.” He said most of the casualties and damage occurred in Bukoba district itself. A group of 15 boarders at a boys’ secondary school was believed to be among the casualties there.

The previous toll from local authorities was 14 dead and 200 injured.

The quake struck at 1227 GMT in a region near Lake Victoria and the borders of Uganda and Rwanda, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS).

Its epicentre was 23 kilometres (15 miles) east of the northwestern town of Nsunga, in Bukoba district.

Bukoba suffered widespread damage, with 270 houses destroyed and electricity disrupted, the Red Cross said in a statement.

Its main hospital was stretched to nearly full capacity and had limited stocks of medicine.

“Telecommunications have been disrupted and we are trying to get a clear picture of the damage to hospitals and other essential infrastructure,” Andreas Sandin, Red Cross operations coordinator in East Africa and the Indian Ocean Islands, said in a statement.

“We ran out immediately, part of my house collapsed,” Bukoba resident Jonathan Mbelwa was quoted as saying in Tanzania’s Swahili-language Habari Leo newspaper.

“Even the old people say they’ve never seen an earthquake as big as this in these parts,” he added.

Earthquakes are fairly common in the Great Lakes region but are almost always of low intensity.

An AFP correspondent who has relatives in Bukoba said 10 family houses had collapsed.

No damage was reported in Tanzania’s economic capital, Dar es Salaam, which is located some 1,400 km southeast of Bukoba.

“It’s safe in Dar but we are still worried about the safety of our family,” the AFP correspondent added. “The regional hospital is overwhelmed and can’t handle any more patients.”

The earthquake was felt as far away as Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda and Kenya, the USGS said.

“So far, no further damages have been reported in Kenya, and minor damages reported in Uganda,” the Red Cross said.

But in Rwanda the shaking was felt across the country, with hotel staff and half-dressed visitors seen rushing out of their rooms in the capital, Kigali, when the quake struck.

In the Burundi capital, Bujumbura, the president’s spokesman, Willy Nyamitwe, tweeted “I just felt an earthquake at 1429”.

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