
Shallow Quakes Rattle Indonesia, Russia, and Kashmir; One Fatality Confirmed in Sulawesi
A series of moderate earthquakes struck across Asia and the Pacific, with a magnitude-5.1 tremor in Central Sulawesi causing building damage and the death of a hospital patient.
A patient at a public hospital in Buol regency, Central Sulawesi, died during a tectonic earthquake that struck the area on Sunday night, according to Indonesian disaster officials. The tremor, initially reported as magnitude 5.4 and later revised to 5.1 by the national meteorology agency (BMKG), damaged several buildings including parts of the hospital itself, a public service mall, and homes, prompting some residents to flee to higher ground despite no tsunami warning.
Elsewhere in the Indonesian archipelago, a magnitude-4.0 quake centred on land 18 km northeast of Gayo Lues, Aceh, was felt at intensity II-III MMI in Bener Meriah, with no immediate reports of damage. In the Pacific, a magnitude-6.4 offshore quake southeast of Lorengau, Papua New Guinea, triggered monitoring by the US Geological Survey but no tsunami threat to Australia, Hawaii, or other Pacific regions, and no early word of casualties.
In Russia’s Buryatia region, a magnitude-4.9 event in the Tunkinsky District, with an epicentral intensity of 7, was felt at 3-4 points in the cities of Irkutsk and Angarsk, according to the Baikal branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences’ geophysical service. Emergency officials reported only weak shaking in settlements and began inspections of buildings. A magnitude-3.6 tremor in Baramulla, Jammu and Kashmir, occurred at a depth of 10 km in the early hours of Monday, with no damage or casualties reported by India’s National Center for Seismology.
Discrepancies in magnitude estimates are common in the immediate aftermath of seismic events. The Buol quake’s parameters were updated by BMKG after initial analysis, while the Papua New Guinea event was listed as 6.5 in some early USGS-based reports before settling at 6.4. Authorities across all affected regions urged residents to rely on official information and remain alert for potential aftershocks. The Buol fatality remains the only confirmed death, and assessments of structural damage are ongoing.
| Southeast Asian press | −0.20 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Russian & CIS press | 0.00 | neutral |
| Arab Gulf press | 0.00 | neutral |
| Indian & South Asian press | 0.00 | neutral |
The earth shakes in Indonesia: a patient dies, local authorities coordinate relief.
By reporting the event through official BMKG and BPBD statements, the account becomes an institutional chronicle that legitimizes the state response.
It does not mention the quakes in Russia or other regions, focusing solely on Indonesian territory.
Russia records moderate tremors: no damage, only scientific data.
By emphasizing technical precision and the absence of damage, the narrative normalizes the event and reassures the population.
It makes no reference to the deadly earthquake in Indonesia, nor to the connection suggested by the global headline.
A quake in the Pacific: no alarm, only monitoring.
By reporting the event in a dry tone and without links to other regions, the account reduces the global relevance of the phenomenon.
It completely ignores the earthquakes in Indonesia and Russia, focusing on a distant, impact-free event.
A mild tremor in Kashmir: no consequences, just a statistical data point.
By emphasizing the low magnitude and absence of damage, the account de-emphasizes the event and places it within a local seismic routine.
It does not mention the earthquakes in Indonesia or Russia, nor the Indonesian victim.
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