A powerful earthquake killed at least six people as it tore down buildings in central Croatia yesterday, leaving a town near the epicentre without electricity as rescuers combed toppled roofs and rubble in the dark.
The tremors were felt as far afield as Vienna while the damage was concentrated in and around Petrinja, a town some 50km south of Croatia’s capital Zagreb.
Among the dead were a young girl in Petrinja and five people in a nearby village, Croatian police said.
As rescue teams shovelled away bricks and other debris, some elderly residents gathered in a park in downtown Petrinja, wrapped in blankets and afraid to return home.
“All the tiles in the bathroom are broken, all the dishes fell out,” Marica Pavlovic, a 72-year-old retired meat factory worker, told AFP of the damage to her home. “Even if we wanted to, we can’t go back in, there is no electricity.”
Earlier in the day Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic said containers would be brought in to house those whose homes remained risky, while military barracks could also take in residents.
“It is not safe to be here, that’s clear as day now,” Plenkovic said as he took stock of the wreckage in Petrinja, which is home to some 20,000 people.
While officials were tallying the scale of the destruction, Petrinja’s mayor Darinko Dumbovic said that a – luckily empty – kindergarten was among the buildings that collapsed from the force of the quake.
“The city is actually a huge ruin. We are saving people, we are saving lives. We have dead people, we have missing people, injured people ... it is a catastrophe,” he told national radio earlier in the day.
The earthquake, which hit around 1130 GMT according to the US Geological Survey, rattled Petrinja and the surrounding area just one day after a smaller earthquake struck in the same vicinity, causing some damage to buildings.
The GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences said it hit at a depth of 10km, with the epicentre in Petrinja.
Yesterday’s quake also shook the capital Zagreb, where panicked residents gathered in the streets as the shocks tore the tiles off roofs.
The tremors reverberated across neighbouring countries.
In Austria’s second city Graz, about 200km north of Petrinja, tall buildings wobbled for about two minutes, according to broadcaster ORF.
In Carinthia province, about 300km to the northwest of Petriinja, the earth trembled for several minutes and people described how their furniture, Christmas trees and lamps wobbled.
In Slovenia, the STA news agency said the country’s sole nuclear power plant, which is 100km from the epicentre, was shut down as a precaution.
Croatia’s state news agency Hina said in total the quake was felt in 12 countries.
European Union leaders said they were closely following the “devastating earthquake” and ready to send in help.
Charles Michel, president of the European Council, said “our thoughts go out to the injured and frontline workers”.