By Mhariri - Sunday, August 12, 2012
Two strong quakes have shaken Iran's northwest, leaving 227 people dead and 1,380 injured, the Interior Ministry reported. The quakes have also disrupted communications, complicating rescue efforts. The quakes, measuring 6.4 and 6.3 on the Richter scale, struck within 11 minutes of each other near the towns of Tabriz and Ahar in East Azerbaijan province on Saturday. About half of the villages located in the disaster zone have been damaged and some have been destroyed completely, Interior Minister Moustafa Mohammad-Najjar told local television.
Iran's main news channel said the first tremor hit the towns of Ahar, Haris and Varzaqan in East Azerbaijan province at 4:53pm local time (12:23 GMT ). The search for surviving victims in the area is over, with national services and aid organizations switching their focus on relief effort. "There are no people left to recover from under the rubble in any village, and all necessary aid is currently being distributed," an interior ministry official in charge of disaster management, Hossein Ghadami, told state television.
About 700 of the people injured by the disaster have been rushed to hospitals in the first hours of the rescue operation.
A spokesman for Tabriz's fire department told the ISNA news agency that "most parts of Tabriz have no electricity… and there is a heavy traffic jam in the city." Hundreds of people were rescued from under the collapsed buildings, but emergency efforts have been hampered by nightfall.
The affected area has been shaken by 35 aftershocks in the hours after the quakes struck, according to FARS. Officials have asked people to stay outdoors overnight. The tremors were felt in neighboring Azerbaijan, according to the local Seismology Institute, but no casualties have been reported.
Iran is generally susceptible to earthquakes, being situated on seismic fault lines. Tremors hit the country every day, but the majority of them are so insignificant that they go unnoticed.
The deadliest was a 6.6-magnitude quake which struck the southern city of Bam in December 2003, killing 31,000 people – about a quarter of the population – and destroying the city's ancient mud-built citadel.

An Iranian man and a child walk past destroyed houses in the town of Varzaqan some 60 kms northeast of Tabriz (AFP Photo / Hamed Nazari)
Iranians search for survivors under the rubble of houses in the town of Varzaqan some 60 kms northeast of Tabriz (AFP Photo / Mahsa Jamali)

Iranians mourn over the covered bodies of loved ones killed in twin earthquakes in the town of Varzaqan some 60 kms northeast of Tabriz (AFP Photo / Mahsa Jamali)

Injured Iranians lie on the grass outside a hospital in the town of Ahar, some 60 kms east of Tabriz (AFP Photo / Kamel Rouhi)

An Iranian woman stands next to her injured child lying on a bed outside a hospital in the town of Ahar, some 60 kms east of Tabriz (AFP Photo / Kamel Rouhi)