6.4-magnitude China quake kills six, damages thousands of homes

Published July 3, 2015
Rescuers help villagers dismantle a damaged wall after an earthquake hit the area in Pishan county in Hetian, in China's northeast Xinjiang region on July 3, 2015. A shallow 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck China's far western region of Xinjiang, the US Geological Survey said, with at least six people killed according to Chinese officials.    CHINA OUT     AFP PHOTO
Rescuers help villagers dismantle a damaged wall after an earthquake hit the area in Pishan county in Hetian, in China's northeast Xinjiang region on July 3, 2015. A shallow 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck China's far western region of Xinjiang, the US Geological Survey said, with at least six people killed according to Chinese officials. CHINA OUT AFP PHOTO

BEIJING: A strong earthquake hit a rural part of China's far western Xinjiang region on Friday, killing at least six people, injuring dozens and destroying or damaging thousands of homes, the government and state media said.

Many traditional houses in the mainly ethnic Uighur region collapsed when the shallow 6.4-magnitude quake struck about 160 kilometres northwest of the southern city of Hotan, emergency officials said.

The dead included a father and son, the government-run China National Emergency Broadcasting said on its website.

The Ministry of Civil Affairs added that at least 3,000 homes either collapsed or were seriously damaged and 1,000 tents were being sent to the region.

State news agency Xinhua put the number of injured at about 50.

“If many people are gathered in one place during an earthquake, it can lead to a serious disaster, but in this case, there were relatively few people so it isn't so serious,” China Earthquake Networks Centre researcher Sun Shihong told state broadcaster China Central Television.

Pictures on social media and state television showed cracks on the walls of buildings and other minor damage.

Earthquakes frequently strike China. A quake in the southwestern province of Sichuan in 2008 killed almost 70,000 people.

Xinjiang, strategically located on the borders of India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia, is one of China's most politically sensitive regions following years of violence, blamed by the government on Islamist militants.

Exiled Uighur groups and human rights activists say the government's own repressive policies and religious and cultural restrictions have provoked unrest, an accusation the government denies.

Read more: Chinese army for bringing 'modern civilisation' to Xinjiang

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