6.1-magnitude quake hits western Indonesia

Bloomberg

An earthquake with magnitude 6.1 on the Richter scale hit western Indonesia on Saturday, though Xinhua reported that officials see no risk of a tsunami.
The epicenter was 166 kilometers south-south-east of Muara Siberut in Indonesia, the United States Geological Survey said. The quake had a depth of 10 kilometers.
The main shock struck
at 4.27 pm local time and didn’t have potential to trigger a tsunami, Xinhua reported, citing an official in charge of Indonesia’s meteorology and geophysics agency. There were no initial reports of damages or casualties, according to the
report.
The earthquake-prone nation experienced 11,557 temblors in 2018 alone,
according to data from Indonesia’s Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency. Of these, 297 carried a magnitude of more than
5 on the Richter scale, the data showed.
In late December, Southeast Asia’s largest economy was struck by a deadly tsunami. It hit near the Sunda Strait, taking the death toll to more than 400 people after a section of
the Mount Anak Krakatau volcano collapsed.

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