Zürcher Nachrichten - Rescuers fly in to join search for Vanuatu quake survivors

EUR -
AED 3.812685
AFN 73.64163
ALL 98.385538
AMD 413.657359
ANG 1.892099
AOA 950.036484
ARS 1061.212013
AUD 1.666987
AWG 1.86847
AZN 1.765228
BAM 1.956109
BBD 2.119735
BDT 125.459814
BGN 1.956688
BHD 0.391242
BIF 3103.360215
BMD 1.038039
BND 1.41811
BOB 7.254076
BRL 6.53041
BSD 1.049866
BTN 89.215371
BWP 14.332263
BYN 3.435743
BYR 20345.563162
BZD 2.109333
CAD 1.498321
CDF 2979.171755
CHF 0.934832
CLF 0.03741
CLP 1032.246247
CNY 7.575088
CNH 7.588677
COP 4539.437694
CRC 528.385993
CUC 1.038039
CUP 27.508032
CVE 110.281354
CZK 25.129901
DJF 186.949525
DKK 7.460858
DOP 63.870395
DZD 139.593406
EGP 52.818223
ERN 15.570584
ETB 131.176548
FJD 2.409085
FKP 0.822108
GBP 0.824583
GEL 2.916932
GGP 0.822108
GHS 15.432289
GIP 0.822108
GMD 74.739022
GNF 9070.345094
GTQ 8.087199
GYD 219.482548
HKD 8.067971
HNL 26.650337
HRK 7.445756
HTG 137.320364
HUF 413.134308
IDR 16887.49215
ILS 3.750372
IMP 0.822108
INR 88.271873
IQD 1375.317203
IRR 43688.46289
ISK 144.671821
JEP 0.822108
JMD 164.415966
JOD 0.736385
JPY 161.050186
KES 134.166619
KGS 90.309291
KHR 4221.62605
KMF 483.855863
KPW 934.234463
KRW 1504.952362
KWD 0.319591
KYD 0.874838
KZT 548.826676
LAK 22995.631686
LBP 94013.247453
LKR 305.978323
LRD 190.02001
LSL 18.950093
LTL 3.065059
LVL 0.6279
LYD 5.135811
MAD 10.483755
MDL 19.291047
MGA 4884.771449
MKD 61.563998
MMK 3371.509975
MNT 3527.256172
MOP 8.403327
MRU 41.720589
MUR 48.351551
MVR 15.99182
MWK 1820.387493
MXN 21.136913
MYR 4.673767
MZN 66.27099
NAD 18.950093
NGN 1615.324163
NIO 38.63573
NOK 11.788884
NPR 142.748232
NZD 1.845534
OMR 0.399636
PAB 1.049956
PEN 3.92272
PGK 4.252672
PHP 61.288415
PKR 292.065726
PLN 4.266683
PYG 8195.294278
QAR 3.827631
RON 4.973765
RSD 116.953804
RUB 108.65726
RWF 1419.924248
SAR 3.900099
SBD 8.702457
SCR 14.814897
SDG 624.384327
SEK 11.529639
SGD 1.412683
SHP 0.822108
SLE 23.656402
SLL 21767.16063
SOS 599.994757
SRD 36.505733
STD 21485.3102
SVC 9.186451
SYP 2608.104223
SZL 18.947992
THB 35.884886
TJS 11.432806
TMT 3.643517
TND 3.330062
TOP 2.431194
TRY 36.377296
TTD 7.129126
TWD 33.891243
TZS 2456.253414
UAH 44.065859
UGX 3821.566722
USD 1.038039
UYU 46.58646
UZS 13503.132541
VES 52.826413
VND 26433.661527
VUV 123.238062
WST 2.867881
XAF 656.060611
XAG 0.03522
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.805352
XDR 0.800826
XOF 656.060611
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.89902
ZAR 18.972663
ZMK 9343.591455
ZMW 29.054589
ZWL 334.248114
  • CMSD

    -0.1700

    23.76

    -0.72%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    24.12

    -0.83%

  • RBGPF

    62.4900

    62.49

    +100%

  • RELX

    -0.6900

    46.33

    -1.49%

  • SCS

    -0.5900

    12.46

    -4.74%

  • AZN

    -2.5400

    64.64

    -3.93%

  • BTI

    -0.2900

    37

    -0.78%

  • GSK

    -0.5400

    33.69

    -1.6%

  • RIO

    -2.1200

    59.34

    -3.57%

  • NGG

    -1.6300

    57.77

    -2.82%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.31

    +0.14%

  • BP

    -0.5400

    28.54

    -1.89%

  • BCC

    -6.4900

    126.62

    -5.13%

  • JRI

    -0.5900

    12.03

    -4.9%

  • VOD

    -0.2200

    8.41

    -2.62%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    23.4

    -0.77%

Rescuers fly in to join search for Vanuatu quake survivors
Rescuers fly in to join search for Vanuatu quake survivors / Photo: STR - AFP

Rescuers fly in to join search for Vanuatu quake survivors

Foreign rescuers joined a hunt for survivors in the rubble of shattered buildings in earthquake-rocked Vanuatu on Thursday, with officials saying the toll of nine dead is set to rise.

Text size:

More than 100 personnel, along with rescue gear, dogs and aid supplies, are being flown on military transport planes from Australia and New Zealand to the stricken capital Port Vila.

The 7.3-magnitude quake struck off the Pacific nation's main island on Tuesday, flattening multi-storey concrete buildings, cracking walls and bridges, damaging water supplies and knocking out most mobile networks.

Vanuatu has declared a seven-day state of emergency "due to the severe impacts", along with a curfew from 6 pm-6 am.

Civilians joined in the immediate rescue effort despite multiple aftershocks shaking the low-lying archipelago of 320,000 people, which lies in the quake-prone Pacific Rim of Fire.

AFP photos showed rescuers working with mechanical diggers at night to save people in one large building, all its floors pancaked into a flat pile of concrete.

Rescuers were focused on searching for people in two collapsed buildings in Port Vila, said Glen Craig of the Vanuatu Business Resilience Council.

"We know people are trapped and some have been rescued, and there have also been fatalities," he told AFP.

"My good friend that was killed in the earthquake -- the funeral is at 2 pm today -- but I have also got to think about the other 300,000 people in Vanuatu," Craig said.

Australia's government flew in a 64-person disaster response team equipped with two dogs, along with six medics, nine police and emergency response managers.

- Death toll set to rise -

"Australia's emergency crews are now on the ground in Vanuatu following the devastating earthquake," said Foreign Minister Penny Wong.

A government-organised flight has also repatriated 61 Australians, she said.

New Zealand is flying in a 36-strong rescue team, government officials said. A separate C-130 military transport plane with rescue equipment and disaster supplies landed on Thursday.

Nine people have been confirmed dead by Port Vila's hospital and that number is likely to rise, according to the latest update by Vanuatu's disaster management office.

The quake caused "major structural damage" to more than 10 buildings including the main hospital, it said, while also hitting three bridges, power lines, water reserves and mobile communications.

The shipping port is closed following a "major landslide".

French engineers have declared Port Vila's airport runway operational, although it has not re-opened to civilian flights.

The death toll will "definitely go up", said Craig, of the Vanuatu business council.

However the country and its people depended on tourism and agriculture, he warned.

- 'People need to come back' -

"We can't have an economic disaster on top of a natural disaster," Craig said, urging a quick restart of the tourism business.

"The runway is in great condition and it has been a huge focus for the government to get that terminal open by tonight or latest tomorrow for commercial flights," he said.

"People need to come and go, it brings normality back."

Craig said he had visited four resorts, which were using generators for electricity and hoping for tourists to return next week.

"Generally, they are okay, there are some cracks and some tiles have popped out, but there is not bad damage."

Basil Leodoro, an emergency doctor in Vanuatu with Respond Global, said landslides blocked airfields on some surrounding islands, raising concerns about food supplies.

Water supplies, including wells and storage systems, were damaged on some islands, he told AFP.

Earthquake injuries were only being reported on the main island of Vanuatu, however.

"As expected, we are seeing open fractures, wounds and closed fractures, soft tissue injury as a result of the earthquake," Leodoro said.

He said he was helping to organise medical support from Fiji and Solomon Islands to relieve exhausted teams in Vanuatu.

"That is the burden we are seeing -- it is not unexpected in these crisis situations."

H.Roth--NZN