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Moderate quake hits disputed Himalayan region

Other News Materials 20 February 2009 12:33 (UTC +04:00)

A moderate earthquake shook the disputed Kashmir region and towns of Pakistan on Friday, causing a few casualties but no major damage, officials and media reports said.

The epicentre of the earthquake, which struck at 8:49 am (0349 GMT), was 95 kilometres north-east of the capital city Islamabad, Pakistan Meteorological Department chief Qamaruz Zaman Chaudhry said, dpa reported.

The jolts were felt in several cities and parts of Pakistan-administered Kashmir where at least 10 schoolchildren were injured in wall collapse incidents.

Aaj news channel said two girls fractured their ankles when they jumped from the first floor of their school in the region, which was devastated in a major October 2005 earthquake that killed at least 73,000 people and left around 3.5 million others homeless.

Friday's earthquake rocked the Kashmir Valley in India as well, triggering panic among residents, IANS news agency reported.

"The earthquake measured 5.5 on the Richter scale," TK Jotshi, assistant director of the weather office in Srinagar, was quoted as saying by IANS news agency.

"Its epicentre was near the India-Pakistan border in Kashmir," he said.

At least 1,300 people died in India's Jammu and Kashmir state in an earthquake in October 2005 measuring 7.6 on the Richter scale.

Memories of the quake led people to rush out of their homes early Friday.

"I was in my bedroom when the bed started rocking. I ran out of my home in panic," Bashir Ahmed, a doctor living in the outskirts of Jammu and Kashmir capital Srinagar, said after Friday's quake.

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