A magnitude 7.3 earthquake struck west of Indonesia’s Sumatra Island on Tuesday. BMKG, Indonesia’s geophysics agency said, the strong earthquake triggered a tsunami warning.
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According to Reuters, the quake, at 84 kilometer (52.2 miles) depth, triggered an initial tsunami warning. The agency BMKG asked local authorities to immediately instruct residents of the affected area to stay away from shores. Indonesia’s disaster mitigation agency said authorities are collecting data from the islands nearest the epicenter, off the western shore of Sumatra, spokesperson Abdul Muhari said.
Earlier, the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) pegged the quake at 6.9 magnitude.
In Padang, the capital of West Sumatra, the quake was felt strongly, and some people moved away from the beaches. People left their homes. Some were panicking but under control. Currently some of them are evacuating away from the sea. Meanwhile, there are no reports of damage so far.
Local news footage showed some Padang residents evacuating by motorbike and foot to higher ground. Some carried backpacks while others huddled together under an umbrella against the rain. “On the Siberut island, people had already been evacuated. They have been told to stay at the evacuation area until tsunami warning is lifted,” Noviandri, a local official told TvOne.
Indonesia suffers frequent earthquakes because it straddles the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire, a seismically active zone where different plates of the earth’s crust meet.
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