2 DEAD, 50 WOUNDED IN MEXICO QUAKE; NUMEROUS FIRES BURNING

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Epicenter is fault line below long-dormant volcano

 

April 4, 2010 (San Diego’s East County) Updated 11:25 p.m. – East County Magazine has obtained translations of Mexican broadcasts moments ago, indicating damage south of the border is substantially more widespread than earlier media reports indicated. At least 50 are injured, according to Mexican Red Cross, and two people have died. Baja California Governor José Guadalupe Osuna Millán announced closure of schools at all levels tomorrow.

 

An estimated seven to nine structural fires are burning this evening following the 7.2 quake and several major aftershocks. All buildings in Mexicali are being checked by structural engineers; employers are advised not to admit personnel until structures have been cleared. Hospitals are damaged, though still in operation.
 

Water mains have broken and crews are working to repair them. Power and telephone communications are slowly being restored. A government building in Mexicali has suffered damage and a nearby parking structure has collapsed.
 

The Los Angeles Times reports that at least six homes in the Mexicali area have been destroyed by fires after propane tanks and power lines were damaged during the quake.
 

In addition, Baja firefighter, Oscar Silas told the Times that fire department had also received reports that several houses near the volcano Cerro Prieto -- about 19 miles from the quake’s epicenter -- sank into the ground as water rose up around them.

 

One man was injured when a house collapsed in Mexicali. A second death occurred when a panicked person ran outside into the street during the quake, but was struck by a car and killed.
 

One bit of good news is that a highway from Tijuana to Mexicali has been reopened and convoys of rescue workers and relief supplies are heading east to Mexicali, a border city of approximately 1 million residents.

 

In neighboring Imperial County, the Imperial Valley Press reports that a section of I-8 is closed due to freeway damage.  One in four store windows on Main Street in El Centro have been shattered by the quakes and one person was injured by a falling sign.

 

The epicenter of the 7.2 quake that rocked Mexicali late today is the Cerro Prieto Fault, site of the long-dormant Cerro Prieto lava dome volcano. According to the Global Volcanism Program website, “Cucupas Indian legends described a monster that covered the land with hot rocks, which grew through the soil and emitted fire tongues, a possible reference to the growth of the volcano.”
 

Volcanologists were not available on Easter Sunday to clarify whether or not the recent earthquake activity may be precursors of renewed volcanic activity in the area.

 

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Comments

This law is a step backwards,

This law is a step backwards, yes, but I honestly don't see any other way of getting illegals out of the country. Simply asking them won't work, so I don't see any other way of getting them to leave short of a holocaust style roundup. And no, I'm not racist, it's just that there's no other semi-civil way to do this. I honestly don't know why they're complaining so much... in WWII my grandpa who lived in Hawaii was thrown in an internment camp and all of his land was confiscated (which he never got back after the war) and he WAS legal. Yea he was bitter, but he didn't complain about it half as much as all these illegals are about the country enforcing a law. If you have so much anxiety about being pulled over and getting deported, you should at least try riding a bike or walking (since you don't even have a license to begin with if you're illegal). I realize that the economy is dependent upon the amazing savings that can be made by hiring illegal workers, but the problem I have with them being here is that they are confined to only the bottom tiers of America's society. And no, I'm not talking about Mexicans in general, because a lot of them are moving up in society - I'm referring to illegals, who will prob never get a soc sec #, and will thus be stuck in their existence of ridiculously underpaid manual labor. By having illegals in this country, we're essentially perpetuating a class of slavery, whereas in Mexico, they would have chances to progress since they are actual citizens there (considering that Mexico undergoes major changes in its, er, "management." Besides, this might sound a bit racist to you, but I live in Santa Ana, CA (a VERY latino community in case you didn’t know) and my house has been broken into twice by mexicans over the last 3 years. I posted pics of them (adt security pics) taken from my surveillance camera, although they were never caught and charged (kind of a waste of money getting that security system installed, but I’ll save that for another day…). Now I’m not saying that all Mexicans are burglars and thieves… hell, if I was in their situation stuck in a racist country like ours, I would be doing the same thing.