Skip to main content

Earthquake rattles Syria, also felt in Jordan and Lebanon

1 min Mena Today

A 4.8 magnitude earthquake struck the city of Hama in western Syria late on Monday, with residents across Syria, Jordan and Lebanon feeling the impact and tremors lasting into Tuesday morning.

The Syrian civil defence operating in the northern opposition-held areas of the war-torn country said they had deployed to several areas but had not received any reports of damage © Mena Today 

The Syrian civil defence operating in the northern opposition-held areas of the war-torn country said they had deployed to several areas but had not received any reports of damage © Mena Today 

A 4.8 magnitude earthquake struck the city of Hama in western Syria late on Monday, with residents across Syria, Jordan and Lebanon feeling the impact and tremors lasting into Tuesday morning.

Syria's health ministry said on Tuesday said around 65 people sustained minor to moderate injuries as they fled in panic following the earthquake.

In Salamiya, a town approximately 30 km (18 miles) east of Hama city, residents rushed out into the dark streets out of fear, said Nasser Duyub, a state employee living there.

"My son was sleeping, I don't know how I grabbed him and got out of the house," Duyub told Reuters.

Salamiya's national hospital treated around 67 cases of shock, the health ministry added.

Residents said they saw a balcony collapse and ambulances treating people who had fainted. SANA news agency, citing Souhad Zaidan, the head of Salamiya's city council, reported minor damage such as cracked walls.

The Syrian civil defence operating in the northern opposition-held areas of the war-torn country said they had deployed to several areas but had not received any reports of damage.

Syria's state news agency SANA said it had registered the earthquake's epicentre in east Hama. The German Research Centre for Geosciences gave its magnitude as 4.8, at a depth of 10 km (6 miles).

Syria's National Earthquake Center said monitoring stations recorded 13 tremors east of Hama city until Tuesday morning.

Jordan's state news agency reported a 3.9 magnitude aftershock less than an hour after the initial quake.

Residents across Lebanon felt the quake. Both Lebanon and Syria have been hit by Israeli air strikes over the last 10 months as regional hostilities play out in parallel with the Gaza war, and several residents said they initially thought the quake was an air strike.

In Syria, some said they had flashbacks to February 2023, when a 7.8 magnitude earthquake killed more than 50,000 people - mostly in Turkey but with thousands also perishing in northern Syria. That earthquake caused widespread destruction in both countries.

"It was the same sound, as if it was coming out of the earth," said Umm Hamzah, a resident of the Syrian capital Damascus. "I got dizzy just like last time, but the scare was worse because I knew what happened in the previous quake."

Reporting by Beirut bureau, Kinda Makieh, Firas Makdesi and Yamam Shaar in Syria, Chandni Shah in Bengaluru, and Enas Alashray in Cairo

Related

Israel

Israel vows to stay in Lebanon, Syria and Gaza indefinitely

Israel's Defence Minister Israel Katz declared Monday that Israeli forces would remain in Lebanon, Syria and Gaza for an indefinite period, in a pointed statement that makes no reference to the US-Iran framework agreement announced the same day.

Lebanon

Lebanon tells displaced families to hold off on returning

Authorities in southern Lebanon warned people displaced by three months of war between Israel and Hezbollah against rushing home on Monday despite a U.S.-Iran deal to end the wider conflict, as Israel said it would not withdraw troops from the south.

Lebanon

The art of the bad deal: Trump's Iran framework explained

Let us call it what it is. The framework agreement on Iran is not a peace deal. It is a capitulation dressed up in diplomatic language, and its most immediate victims are the two countries that have paid the highest price in blood and treasure to confront Iran's aggression: Israel and Lebanon.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Mena banner 4

To make this website run properly and to improve your experience, we use cookies. For more detailed information, please check our Cookie Policy.

  • Necessary cookies enable core functionality. The website cannot function properly without these cookies, and can only be disabled by changing your browser preferences.