At least five people, including a child, were killed and around 100 injured when a magnitude 5.7 earthquake struck Bangladesh yesterday, the government said, with buildings damaged in many areas including the densely populated capital Dhaka.
Tremors were felt in eastern states in neighbouring India that border Bangladesh, but there were no immediate reports of major damage there, authorities said.
Muhammad Yunus, the head of Bangladesh’s interim government, said the injured included students from Dhaka university, factory workers in the city of Gazipur and residents of Narsingdi, the epicentre of the earthquake.
His statement gave no details of how the five died. Police said earlier three people had been killed when the railing of a six-storey building collapsed during the earthquake.
Several of the injured taken to hospital from Narsingdi, about 40km east of Dhaka, were in a critical condition, health adviser Nurjahan Begum told reporters.
Dhaka residents rushed out of their homes as buildings shook and some makeshift structures collapsed, Reuters witnesses said.
“We felt a strong jolt and buildings were shaking like trees,” said resident Suman Rahman. “Staircases were jammed as people rushed down. Everyone was terrified, children were crying.”
The fire department said some people had been injured when bricks and loose cement fell from buildings that were under construction.