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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
3 strong quakes kill at least 66 in western Iran
2006-03-31


At least 1,000 injured in temblors; 200 villages damaged or flattened.
TEHRAN, Iran - Three strong earthquakes and several aftershocks jolted western Iran overnight, killing at least 66 people and injuring about 1,200 others, state television reported Friday.

The initial quake of magnitude 4.7 struck a mountainous region in western Iran late Thursday. It was followed by a quake of magnitude 5.1 that struck Boroujerd and Doroud, two industrial cities in western Iran, at 11:06 p.m. local time Thursday, state television said.

A third temblor of magnitude 6.0 hit Doroud and surrounding villages at 4:47 a.m. local time on Friday, the television reported.
A total of 66 bodies had been recovered from houses in destroyed in Silakhor, a region north of Doroud, the television reported.
200 villages damaged
The provincial head of the Unexpected Disaster Committee, Ali Barani, said no fewer than 200 villages were damaged, and some were flattened.
Most of the 1,200 people injured had been in bed when the quake struck, the television said.
The quake in the middle of the night caused panic, with citizens in Doroud running out of their homes. Many spent the night in open space, residents said.
"We are afraid to get back home. I spent the night with my family and guests in open space last night," Doroud resident Mahmoud Chaharmiri told The Associated Press by telephone.
Twelve aftershocks were registered after the first quake, said Nabi Bidhendi, the head of Tehran Tehran University's Geophysics Institute.
Such quakes have killed thousands of people in the past in the countryside where houses are often built of mudbricks, but initial reports suggested the devastation had not been so widespread this time, Chaharmiri said.
The epicenter of Thursday night's quake was in the mountains south of Boroujerd and north of Doroud.
The U.S. Geological Survey reported a 5.7-magnitude quake at 4:47 a.m., followed by a 4.7-magnitude 15 minutes later. Their epicenters were 210 miles southwest of Tehran.
The area had been hit by a 4.7-magnitude quake the day before, the USGS said.
Hospitals filled to capacity
Disaster official Barani told the official Islamic Republic News Agency that rescue teams had been sent to the region to help the survivors. He said survivors were in urgent need of blankets, tents and food.
First television images of the quake showed survivors standing next to their destroyed houses in villages north of Doroud. The television also showed dozens of sheep and goats killed by the quake.
Barani said hospitals in the cities of Doroud and Boroujerd were full to their capacity and could not receive further injured, the television reported.
Officials recalled on doctors and nurses from vacation to help treat the injured. Iranians are celebrating Nowruz, or new year, and most government offices are closed and their staff on holiday.
Iran is located on seismic fault lines and is prone to earthquakes. It experiences at least one slight earthquake everyday on average.
In February 2005, a 6.4-magnitude quake rocked the town of Zarand in southern Iran, killing 612 people and injuring more than 1,400.
A magnitude-6.6 quake flattened the historic southeastern city of Bam in the same region in December 2003, killing 26,000 people.

Allah hates you, don't you see? I don't want one red cent of my money going there for relief.
Posted by:JerseyMike

#6  This doesn't have anything to do with underground testing in tunnels, like planned in our own Nevada desert does it?

Our seismic sensing apparatus allows us to easily distinguish between natural earth movements, large scale conventional explosives and nuclear tests. The waveform envelope contours for each of these three types of energy releases are distinctly different and easily distinguished from each other.

Had this been any sort of ordnance test it would have been leaked to the media already. Many other nations have detection equipment similar to ours. Besides, Iran already has a special test facility designed for the firing of the explosive focusing lenses used to initiate a nuclear explosion.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-03-31 20:34  

#5  Ahura Mazda wakes up. And He's very, very unhappy with what has been going on in Iran for the last 1400 years.
Posted by: gromgoru   2006-03-31 19:46  

#4  May these be precursors. Inshallah.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-03-31 16:46  

#3  This doesn't have anything to do with underground testing in tunnels, like planned in our own Nevada desert does it? Can't we locate their origin and get the Iranian GPS coordinates?
Posted by: Danielle   2006-03-31 16:06  

#2  I'm curious as to whether or not this was the work of Allah. Any islamacists want to enlighten us?
Posted by: DoDo   2006-03-31 11:51  

#1  The television also showed dozens of sheep and goats killed by the quake.

WTF? Maybe the sheep and goats were in mudbrick stables.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2006-03-31 11:25  

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