Magnitude 6.3 earthquake strikes near coast of Ecuador

21 hours ago 14

DEVELOPING STORY,

The epicentre of the quake is believed to have been near the Pacific coast of the north-western city of Esmeraldas.

Published On 25 Apr 2025

A magnitude 6.3 earthquake has struck near the coast of Ecuador, according to the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC).

The epicentre of the quake – which took place at about 6:45am local time (11:45 GMT) – was near the Pacific coast of the north-western city of Esmeraldas, at a depth of 30km (18.6 miles), said the EMSC. Tremors were reported in 10 provinces of the country, even as far as the capital Quito.

Images shared online show buildings visibly damaged in the earthquake. Ecuador’s daily El Comrecio newspaper reported power outages in Esmeraldas.

“It was very strong,” ex-presidential candidate Yaku Perez told the AFP news agency from the scene. “It felt like an eternity, but I guess it was less than a minute”.

Damaged facilities included a health centre and a military building, the facade of which partially collapsed, according to authorities.

One person suffered head wounds from the shake, said the country’s emergency service.

Imágenes muestran varios daños sufridos por algunas edificaciones en #Esmeraldas#Ecuador . Esto luego de un sismo de 6.0 #temblor pic.twitter.com/nrQwEc0Mts

— Ecuador Comunicación 🛜 Siempre Más Noticias (@ecuadorprensaec) April 25, 2025

Past earthquakes

Ecuador has a long and painful history of seismic disasters.

In 2013, a quake that rattled northern Peru and southern Ecuador left at least 14 people dead and destroyed homes, schools and health clinics.

Three years later, in 2016, a devastating magnitude 7.8 earthquake – Ecuador’s strongest since 1979 – killed at least 77 people and injured more than 500 others.

The country lies along the Pacific’s “Ring of Fire”, a volatile zone of seismic and volcanic activity encircling the ocean.

Ecuador straddles the boundary where the Nazca and South American tectonic plates meet – two massive sections of the Earth’s crust that grind against each other, moving at an average rate of about 65 millimetres (2.5 inches) per year.

Source

:

Al Jazeera and news agencies

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