Turkey-Syria earthquake world’s fifth deadliest disaster; Asia’s 2004 tsunami remains worst ever

Wednesday, 15 February 2023 02:05 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

PARIS, AFP: The massive earthquake that struck Turkey and Syria on 6 February is the fifth-deadliest this century.

Here is a list of the 10 worst quakes since 2000, ranked by death toll:

n2004: 230,000 dead, Southeast Asia - On 26 December, a massive 9.1-magnitude earthquake strikes off the coast of Sumatra, triggering a tsunami that killed over 230,000 people throughout the region, including 170,000 in Indonesia alone. Waves 30 metres (100 feet) high, travelling at 700 kilometres per hour (435 miles per hour), swallow everything in their path.

n2010: 200,000 dead, Haiti a magnitude 7 quake on 12 January devastates the capital Port-au-Prince and the surrounding region. The quake cuts the country off from the rest of the world for 24 hours, killing over 200,000 people, leaving 1.5 million homeless and shattering much of Haiti’s frail infrastructure. In October the same year, Haiti is also hit by a cholera epidemic introduced by Nepalese peacekeepers who arrived after the quake. It killed over 10,000 people.

n2008: 87,000 dead, Sichuan – over 87,000 people, including 5,335 school pupils, are left dead or missing when a 7.9-magnitude quake strikes south-western Sichuan province on 12 May. The quake causes outrage after it emerges that 7,000 schools were badly damaged, triggering accusations of shoddy construction, corner-cutting and possible corruption, especially as many other buildings nearby held firm.

n2005: 73,000 dead, Kashmir an 8 October earthquake kills over 73,000 people, the vast majority in Pakistan’s North-West Frontier Province and the Pakistani-administered zone of Kashmir. A further 3.5 million are displaced.

n2023: 35,000 dead, Turkey and Syria On 6 February, a 7.8-magnitude quake strikes near the Turkish city of Gaziantep, close to the Syrian border. The biggest quake in Turkey in nearly a century, which is followed by a 7.5 magnitude tremor, reduces entire neighbourhoods of cities in south-eastern Turkey and the north of war-ravaged Syria to rubble. On 13 February, the toll hits 35,224.

n2003: 31,000 dead, Bam (Iran) a 6.6-magnitude quake in south-eastern Iran on 26 December destroys the ancient mud-brick city of Bam, killing at least 31,000 people. Nearly 80% of Bam’s infrastructure is damaged and the desert citadel, once considered the world’s largest adobe building, crumbles.

n2001: 20,000 dead, India - A massive 7.7-magnitude earthquake on 26 January hits the western Indian state of Gujarat, killing over 20,000 people. The quake flattens buildings across the state, with many fatalities in the town of Bhuj near the border with Pakistan.

n2011: 18,500 dead, Japan - On 11 March, Japan is struck by an enormous 9.0-magnitude earthquake, unleashing a towering tsunami. Around 18,500 people are left dead or missing as the wall of water travelling at the speed of a jet plane levels communities along the north-eastern coast. The ensuing meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant blankets nearby areas with radiation, rendering some towns uninhabitable for years and displacing tens of thousands of residents.

n2015: 9,000 dead, Nepal – a 7.8-magnitude earthquake on 25 April strikes in central Nepal, triggering avalanches and landslides across the Himalayan nation, destroying schools and hospitals. The quake kills almost 9,000 people and renders millions homeless. It also reduces more than a hundred monuments to rubble, including centuries-old temples and royal palaces in the Kathmandu valley.

n2006: 6,000 dead, Java - On 26 May, a 6.3-magnitude quake rocks the southern coast of the Indonesian island of Java, near the city of Yogyakarta, killing around 6,000 people. Over 420,000 are left homeless and around 157,000 houses are destroyed.

 

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