Monday, June 2, 2025 - Tourists in western Turkey and the Greek islands were shaken awake on Monday night as a 5.8-magnitude earthquake struck near the popular holiday destination of Rhodes.
A 5.8-magnitude earthquake shook the Mediterranean coastal
town of Marmaris on Tuesday, Turkey’s disaster management agency said.
At least one person has d!ed in Turkey, while dozens of
people sustained injuries as panicked locals tried to jump off their buildings,
according to local reports.
The quake struck about 29km north of Rhodes, the
largest of the Dodecanese islands near the Turkey border, at around
2.17am (local time) on Tuesday at a depth of 68km, according to the European
Mediterranean Seismological Centre.
The shockwaves were felt across parts of
southern Greece, western Turkey, and coastal areas of the Aegean Sea,
local reports said.
A 14-year-old child d!ed in the resort town of Fethiye
following the earthquake, Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said. The teenager
was brought to the hospital but could not be saved, he added.
Dozens of locals were taken to hospital for treatment in
Mugla in Turkey after they suffered injuries while trying to rush outside their
homes.
Acar Unlu, the mayor of the Turkish resort town of Marmaris,
told NTV broadcast that the region was jolted by the earthquake, prompting
disaster management teams to be dispatched to assess the damage.
Tourists in the Greek islands hit by the earthquake this
morning said they were woken by violent shaking. "Nothing like being woken
up while on the 5th floor building in Rhodes, while an earthquake is violently
shaking the building! Something I can tick off the list," said X user
Steven.
Earthquakes there are relatively frequent in Turkey.
At least 53,000 people were killed in a 7.8-magnitude
earthquake on 6 February 2023 followed by a second powerful tremor. The
earthquakes destroyed scores of buildings and roads in 11 southern and
southeastern provinces. The same incident killed 6,000 people in neighbouring
Syria.
Last month a powerful 6.1-magnitude earthquake struck
off the coast of Crete in Greece, prompting the European-Mediterranean
Seismological Centre (EMSC) to issue an alert for a possible tsunami. Some
popular sites on the island were closed amid landslides, but no significant
injuries or damage were reported.
0 Comments