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6.3-magnitude earthquake rocks Philippines: USGS![]() |
A 6.3-magnitude quake rocked the Philippines Friday, the US Geological Survey said, with residents in the capital Manila reporting buildings shaking and Christmas Day masses interrupted but there were no reports of damage.
The quake struck in Batangas province on the main island of Luzon at a depth of 114 kilometres (70 miles) at 7:43 am local time (2343 GMT), according to USGS.
The agency initially said the quake's strength was 6.2 and 108 kilometres deep.
In the coastal city of Calatagan, about 90 kilometres south of Manila and near the epicentre, people attending mass remained calm as the earthquake hit, police chief Major Carlo Caceres told AFP.
"There was a pause in the church service, but the people did not panic," Caceres said.
"This area is quake-prone and people are more or less used to them."
There were no reports of damage or casualties in the area, he added.
"The office furniture and equipment swayed, but nothing was broken," said policeman Allan Megano in the nearby town of Balayan.
The Philippines is situated on the Pacific "Ring of Fire", an arc of intense seismic activity that stretches from Japan through Southeast Asia and across the Pacific basin.
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Dilapidated buildings cause jitters in quake-prone Cyprus
Nicosia (AFP) Dec 23, 2020
On the divided Mediterranean island of Cyprus, where abandoned and dilapidated buildings are reminders of crisis and conflict, recent seismic activity has residents worried.
A powerful earthquake in the Aegean Sea levelled buildings in nearby Turkey and Greece in late October, killing over 100 people.
Another quake this month, whose epicentre was 130 kilometres (80 miles) north of the island, even shook the inland capital of Nicosia, Europe's last divided capital.
Cypriots have begun to sou ... read more
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