Buildings in Kermanshah withstand massive 6.4 quake: report
TEHRAN(Basirat) : While a powerful quake measuring 6.4 on the Richter scale rocked the western city of Sarpol-e Zahab in Kermanshah province on Sunday, almost all buildings withstood the temblor, local media reported.
Over 700 people were reportedly injured and except for a small number many were
discharged from the hospitals within hours.
No one was injured or died because of being buried under heap of rubble; almost
all of them sustained injuries while running way terrified at the temblor.
That was while on November 12, 2017 a destructive magnitude 7.3 earthquake hit
Sarpol-e Zahab. Some 90,000 houses were partly or completely damaged by the
tremor in urban and rural areas leaving many displaced. Sadly, the quake took
over 660 lives and left more than 10,000 injured.
After the tragic magnitude 7.3 quake of last year many organizations including
Islamic Revolution Housing Foundation affiliated to Transport and Urban
Development Ministry as well as Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps along with
volunteer groups joined hands in rebuilding the quake-hit areas since last
year.
While many were worried about the resistance of the newly-constructed building
against another earthquake the powerful quake of Sunday night was solid evidence
of the buildings seismic resistance.
Houshang Bazvand, Kermanshah Governor general told Sobh-e No daily newspaper
that as a result of the earthquake, 729 individuals referred to healthcare
centers and only 18 were hospitalized.
"This indicates that many were only terrified of the earthquake as they have
been dealing with recurrent earthquakes over the past year, it is pretty normal
for them to feel this way,” Bazvand suggested.
The earthquake was pretty huge and occurred at a shallow depth of 7 kilometers
and is the biggest quake after last November’s temblor, he added.
But thankfully no one died as all the houses are either reconstructed or
retrofitted, he highlighted.
Omid Rostami one of the residents of Sarpol-e Zahab also told Sobh-e No daily
newspaper that once the earthquake hit, people were scared stiff, but the houses
were not damaged except for five of them which didn’t go through any
retrofitting process over the last year.
Rostami also highlighted that only 7 individuals who sustained injuries were
transferred to Kermanshah to receive professional medical care.
Mehrbanoo, another residents of Bazmirabad, a village in Sarpol-e Zahab, also
said that the quake only moved the furniture around and didn’t cause any damages
to the houses in the village. Even the windows are not broken, she added.
What has happened in Kermanshah over the past year have a clear message:
retrofitting and reconstruction of rundown areas is a must for all cities and
villages nationwide as Iran, located in the Alpine-Himalayan orogenic belt,
where more than 95 percent of the world earthquakes occur is a seismic country.
Source:TehranTimes