A powerful earthquake struck near Iran’s Gulf port city of Bushehr today, killing at least 20 people and injuring 650 but leaving Iran’s only nuclear power plant intact, officials said.
Shocks from the quake were felt across the Gulf in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, provoking panic and the brief evacuation of some office towers, residents and media said.
“At least 20 bodies have been taken to the morgue” in the city of Khormoj, an unnamed hospital official told Iranian state news agency IRNA.
Khormoj, east of provincial capital Bushehr, is some 35 kilometres from Kaki.
Bushehr provincial Governor Fereydoon Hasanvand added that at least 650 people were hurt and and were receiving medical attention.
There were no immediate details on where the casualties occurred, but the head of Iran’s Red Crescent rescue corps, Mahmoud Mozafar, said initial reports indicated that at least one village near Khormoj had been razed.
He said major damage was probable considering the rural nature of the stricken area, home to some 12,000 inhabitants.
Media reports said search and rescue teams were dispatched to the area, to which telephone connection and electricity had been cut.
Meanwhile, Hasanvand told state television “no damage at all has been caused” to the nuclear plant.
The facility’s chief engineer, Mahmoud Jafari, told Arabic—language Al—Alam television that “no operational or security protocols were breached” by the quake.
The 6.1 magnitude quake hit at 1152 GMT with a depth of 12 kilometres, in the area of Kaki, nearly 90 kilometres southeast of Bushehr, the Iran Seismological Centre said.
The agency has so far reported more than a dozen after shocks, the strongest at 5.3 magnitude.
The US Geological Survey, which monitors quakes worldwide, ranked the quake at a more powerful 6.3 magnitude.
Iran sits astride several major fault lines and is prone to frequent earthquakes, some of which have been devastating.