GUATEMALA CITY (Reuters) - A strong earthquake off the coast of Guatemala on Wednesday shook buildings in Guatemala City, killed eight people and caused evacuations as far away as Mexico City.
A local fire chief
said the dead were buried under rubble in three different Guatemalan
towns. It was the strongest earthquake to hit Guatemala since a 7.5
magnitude quake in 1976 that claimed more than 20,000 lives.
Landslides were
blocking roads in some areas, authorities said, and about 40 houses were
severely damaged after the 7.4 magnitude earthquake hit at 10:35 a.m.
local time (1135 EDT).
The quake struck off Guatemala's Pacific coast, 15 miles south of Champerico, Guatemala, and 101 miles west-southwest of the capital, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
A Reuters witness
in Guatemala City said people were returning to work after evacuations
which filled the streets with office workers calling friends and
relatives on their cellphones.
"It was really big,
I felt quite nauseous," said secretary Vanessa Castillo, 32, who was
evacuated from her 10th-floor office in Guatemala City.
Building janitor
Jorge Gamboa said: "I was in the bathroom. When I came out the office
was empty and I thought, what's happening? They didn't even say
goodbye."
The epicenter was
26 miles below the surface, according to the USGS, which initially
reported the quake as magnitude 7.5.
The quake was also
felt in El Salvador and more than 750 miles away in Mexico City, where
some office workers were also briefly evacuated. Mayor Marcelo Ebrard
said the quake was felt strongly in a large part of the city of 20
million people.
The Pacific Tsunami
Warning Center said a very small tsunami was registered on Guatemala's
coast, adding there was a risk of localized damage within a 62 mile
radius. LINK