Port Vila, VUT- (AFP) Rescue  teams  dug  for  survivors  trapped  in  crumpled  buildings  in  the  Pacific nation  of Vanuatu  on  Wednesday  after  a  powerful  earthquake  killed  at  least  nine  people, burying  some in  rubble  and  landslides.

People  called  out  from  beneath  the  remains  of  a  flattened  three-storey  shop  in  the  capital Port Vila,  where  scores  of  rescuers  worked  through  the  night  to  find  them,  resident  Michael Thompson  told  AFP  by  satellite  phone.

“We  got  three  people  out  that  were  trapped.  Unfortunately, one  of  them  did  not  make  it,” he said.

About  80  people  including  police,  medics,  trained  rescuers  and  volunteers  used excavators, jackhammers,  grinders  and  concrete  saws,  “just  everything  we  can  get  our hands  on”.

When  rescuers  on  the  site  went  quiet,  they  could  hear  three  people  within  signalling they were alive on Wednesday, Thompson said.

“There’s  tonnes  and  tonnes  of  rubble  on  top  of  them.  And  two  rather  significant concrete beams  that  have  pancaked  down,”  he said.  “Obviously  they  are  lucky  to  be  in a  bit  of  a  void.”

AFP  photos  showed  rescuers  using  heavy  machinery  to  claw  away  rubble  from  the squashed concrete  remains  of  a  building,  dust  clouding  the  air.

The  7.3-magnitude  quake  struck  off  Vanuatu’s  main  island  at  12:47  pm  local  time  (0147 GMT) on Tuesday.

– State  of  emergency –

It  flattened  large  buildings,  cracked walls , shattered  windows  and  set  off  landslides  in  the low- Lying  archipelago  of 320,000  people,  which  lies  in  the  quake-prone  Pacific  Rim  of Fire. A  string  of  aftershocks  has  since  shaken  the  Pacific  island  nation.

Vanuatu  declared  a  seven-day  state  of  emergency  “due  to  the  severe  impacts”,  along  with  a curfew  from  6 pm-6 am.

Australia  and  New Zealand  flew  in  medical  and  search-and-rescue  personnel  on  military transport  aircraft – including  a  64-person  Australian  team  with  two  search  dogs.

Nine people  have  been  confirmed  dead  by  Port  Vila’s  hospital  and  that  number  is  likely to rise,  said  an  update  by  Vanuatu’s  disaster  management  office.

The  office  had  earlier  said  at  least  14  people  were  killed.  A government spokesperson was unable to immediately  explain  the  change.

Two  of  the  dead  were  Chinese  citizens,  the  country’s  ambassador  to  Vanuatu  told Chinese television.

The  quake  caused  “major  structural  damage”  in  more  than  10  buildings,  including  the main hospital,  while  also  hitting  three  bridges  and  power lines,  the  disaster  office’s  report said.

– Water  reserves  destroyed –

Two  major  water  reserves  supplying  Port Vila  had  been  “totally  destroyed”.  Mobile communications  were “functional  with  intermittent  disruptions”,  it  said. Port  Vila’s  main wharf  was  closed  “due  to  a  major  landslide”.

The airport was  “not  operational”  but  could  handle  incoming  humanitarian  aid,  the report said.

French  engineers  set  up  satellite  communications  at  the  airport  and  declared  the runway operational,  said  the  French  ambassador  Jean-Baptiste  Jeangene  Vilmer.

The  ground  floor of  a four-storey  concrete  block  in  Port Vila — used  by  the  US,  French, British, Australian  and  New  Zealand  diplomatic  missions – collapsed,  AFP  photos  showed.

US,  French  and  Australian  staff  members  who  were  inside  are  safe,  the  three  countries  have said.

Thompson,  who  runs  a  zipline  adventure  business  in  Vanuatu , said  he  had  seen  at  least three bodies in the city.

– ‘We  could  hear  screams’ –

He  drove  near  the  airport  past  a  toppled  four-storey  block  shortly  after  the  quake.  Its ground floor  had  collapsed  under  the  upper  storeys.

“When  we  slowed  down  with  the  windows  down,  we  could  hear  screams  coming  from  inside,” he said.

The  quake  crushed  four  large  buildings  In  Port  Vila  and  triggered  landslides  including one that  covered  a  bus, Thompson  said.

The  UN  Office  for  the  Coordination  of  Humanitarian  Affairs  has  estimated  116,000 people could  be  affected  by  the  worst  impacts  of  the  quake.

“People  are  still  hanging  out  in  parks  and  some  areas  because  they  are  afraid  to  go back home  for  fear  of  the  aftershocks  and  more  earthquakes,”  said  Rebecca  Olul,  a local  official with  the  UN  children’s  charity  UNICEF.

Concerns  were  mounting  over  access  to  fresh  water  and  the  challenge  now  would  be ensuring  people  are  safe  while  finding  those  who  are  missing,  she  told  AFP.

Vanuatu  is  ranked  as  one  of  the  countries  most  susceptible  to  natural  disasters  such  as earthquakes,  storm  damage,  flooding  and  tsunamis,  according  to  the  annual  World  Risk Report.

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