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The
death toll from a 6.0-magnitude earthquake that shook eastern Turkey on
Monday reached 57, reports Turkish newspaper Hurriyet Daily News.
Fifty-seven people had been killed by the quake,
which caused the most deaths in six villages around the epicenter in the
Karakocan town of the eastern province of Elazig, the newspaper quoted
Karakocan mayor as saying.
The quake struck Basyurt region of Karakocan town at a
depth of 5 km at 4:32 a.m. local time (0232 GMT), said the
Istanbul-based Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute of
Turkey's Bogazici University.
Tremors were also felt in neighboring provinces of
Tunceli, Bingol and Diyarbakir, said Hurriyet Daily News.
The institute has so far reported 27 aftershocks and
more are expected over the next hours and days, according to the
newspaper.
The Turkish Red Crescent had sent 500 tents and
foodstuff to the quake zone, while State Minister and Deputy Prime
Minister Cemil Cicek and other senior officials had left the capital
Ankara for Elazig, the semi-official Anatolia news agency reported.
Elementary and secondary schools in the disaster area
will be closed for two days, the agency said.
It quoted Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Situation
Management Directorate as saying the magnitude of the quake was 5.8 on
the Richter scale.
On Feb. 21, a 4.3-magnitude earthquake was recorded
in the Gokdere region of Elazig, but no damage was reported, said
Hurriyet Daily News.
With much of its territories lying atop the North
Anatolian fault, Turkey is a quake-prone country. In 1999, more than
18,000 people were killed in two devastating earthquakes in the country.
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