Earthquake of magnitude 4.8 strikes Jordan-Syria region, GFZ reports
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Syria’s state news agency said it registered the earthquake’s epicentre as being in the east of the Syrian city of Hama.
PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM USGS
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DAMASCUS – A 4.8-magnitude earthquake struck Jordan and Syria late on Aug 12, according to the German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ), with residents across both countries and in Lebanon feeling its impact but no immediate reports of fatalities.
The quake was at a depth of 10km, GFZ said. It had earlier reported the magnitude at 5.46 but revised it down minutes later.
Syria’s state news agency said it registered the earthquake’s epicentre as being in the east of the Syrian city of Hama. Hama police chief Hussein Jumaa told Syrian state media that there were no reports of injuries in the city.
In Salamiyah, a town approximately 30km east of Hama city, residents rushed out into the dark streets out of fear, said Mr Nasser Duyub, a state employee living there.
“My son was sleeping. I don’t know how I grabbed him and got out of the house,” he said.
Residents said they saw a balcony collapse and ambulances treating people who had fainted.
Others in Syria said they had immediate flashbacks to 2023, when a 7.8-magnitude earthquake killed more than 50,000 – mostly in Turkey but with thousands also perishing in northern Syria. The quake also left widespread destruction in both countries.
“It was the same sound, as if it was coming out of the earth,” said resident Umm Hamzah, who lives in the Syrian capital Damascus. “I got dizzy just like last time, but the scare was worse because I knew what happened the previous quake.”
The Syrian civil defence agency operating in the northern opposition-held areas of the war-torn country said it had deployed resources to several areas to respond to any emergency, but had not received reports of any damage thus far.
Residents across Lebanon also felt the quake. Both Lebanon and Syria have been hit by Israeli air strikes over the last 10 months as regional hostilities play out in parallel with the Gaza war, and several residents said they initially thought the quake was an air strike.
Jordan’s state news agency reported a 3.9-magnitude aftershock less than an hour after the initial quake. REUTERS

