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Quote:HONIARA, April 2 (Reuters) - At least six people were killed and entire villages engulfed by the sea after a powerful earthquake and tsunami struck the tiny Solomon Islands, triggering a Pacific panic and fears of more deaths.

The shallow quake, with a magnitude of at least 8.0, levelled buildings and damaged a hospital on Gizo island northwest of the Solomons capital, Honiara, while a tsunami sucked homes into the sea as thousands of panicked residents fled for higher ground.

"At least six people are confirmed dead, but that number will increase because there are lots of missing people," Solomon Islands' chief government spokesman Alfred Maesulia told Reuters.

"The wave was up to 10-metres (32 feet) high in some villages. Some villages have been entirely washed away."

"It was just like a real extreme tide ... the water just came up about probably about 4 to 5 metres (13 to 16 feet) above sea level and kind of just went up into the communities and doused everything," Danny Kennedy, a dive shop owner and provincial politician on Gizo, told Reuters.

A 12-year-old girl in Gizo drowned as the tsunami swept ashore. Witnesses said an elderly woman also died when she was trapped in her house as it was washed into the sea by the retreating wave but she had not been included in the official toll.

Two died on the western Solomons island of Choiseul, while three people died on the remote island on Mono, Maesulia said.

"Those western islands are very scattered and it's very difficult for us to get there or communicate, but we are sending a team to investigate," he said.

The Solomons government national disaster council was meeting in Honiara.

Jackson Kiloe, the Premier of Choiseul, said huge rolling waves were crashing ashore, prompting evacuations.

"The huge wave rolls are stronger than floods," he said. "They are causing large areas of ocean to dry up."

In the Papua New Guinea port city of Rabaul, residents fled as the sea drained, a possible pointer to a coming tsunami. The Australian government said a 3-metre wave struck the western Papua New Guinea island of Bougainville.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii placed the quake's centre 350 km (220 miles) north-west of Honiara when it struck at about 6:40 a.m. (2040 GMT on Sunday).

An alert from the centre also prompted regional tsunami warnings in Japan and Australia. Beaches along Australia's east coast were shut and ferry services halted on Sydney Harbour amid fears of a repeat of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami disaster.

COMMUNICATIONS PROBLEMS
Solomons' disaster management authorities said communications problems were preventing an assessment of damage on Simbo island where residents reported waves hitting houses 200 metres (200 yards) inland.

On nearby Mono four people were missing after a series of landslides. In Gizo, a hospital was damaged in the town of about 20,000 and patients had been taken to a doctor's house on higher ground, with more than 2,000 left homeless.

"There are quite large boats sitting in the middle of the road. Many of the houses that were on stilts are sitting on the ground. A number of the coastal communities have been completely wiped out," dive shop owner Kennedy said.

The National Disaster Management Office manager Julian McLeod said up to 60 buildings had been destroyed, including houses.

"We are telling people to flee to higher ground in case of more waves. We're used to cyclones hitting the island, but this is a new one," he said.

Geological agencies, including those in Australia and Japan, put the magnitude of the quake at 8.1 while the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) revised its earlier estimate to 8.0.

The initial tremor was followed around seven minutes later by a second one, centred further west, of magnitude 6.7, USGS said.

The Solomon Islands lies on the so-called Pacific "Ring of Fire" where volcanic activity and earthquakes are relatively common.

The islands are popular with international travellers for scuba diving. Most homes in the mountainous islands are constructed of timber and bamboo, with villagers relying on fishing and logging for employment.

Thousands of people have been left homeless and several have been killed by a tsunami that devastated a South Pacific island early this morning.

Surfers at Bondi Beach in Australia ignored warnings to stay out of the water


The huge waves were triggered by a magnitude-8 earthquake under the sea, and beaches hundreds of miles away in Australia were shut as officials feared a repeat of the Boxing Day 2004 tsunami which killed 230,000 people.

Near the epicentre of the quake, a 10ft-high wall of water which struck the Solomon Islands is said to have killed 15 people as well as destroying homes, offices and a hospital.

The tsunami struck Gizo, a town in the west of the country, just minutes after islanders first felt tremors from the earthquake at 7.40am local time (8.40pm yesterday GMT).

“Reports have come in that more than 15 people died, just around Gizo,” Alex Lokopio, Western Province premier, told Radio New Zealand.

“There wasn’t any warning. This was a very sad thing because the warning was the earth tremors. It shook us very, very strongly and we were frightened.

“All of a sudden the sea was rising up so all the people living around the coastal area, they ran up on the hill.”

He said millions of dollars would be needed to repair the damage caused by the quake, as many homes, government buildings and businesses have been destroyed, and that islanders made homeless by the disaster now need emergency supplies.

“What we desperately need now is water, tents, and food because almost 3,000-4,000 people are now living on the hill at Gizo.”

Judith Kennedy, a resident of the Solomon Islands, said water “right up to your head” swept through the town.

She said: “The downtown area is a very big mess from the tsunami and the earthquake. A lot of houses have collapsed. The whole town is still shaking.”

A plane is due to fly over the devastated area later today to assess the extent of the damage.

Telegraph.co.uk
Hi Forwardone, I also picked up this piece of news from Reuters, but I posted it in Thailand's Neighbour. Anyway good to know.
Ah, I wondered how close this was to Thailand but as I wasn`t sure I posted in the International thread. I`ll move it over now then.

Threads merged.
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