
A man photographs a building that collapsed after an earthquake in Machala, Ecuador on Saturday.
Johnny Crespo/AP
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Johnny Crespo/AP

A man photographs a building that collapsed after an earthquake in Machala, Ecuador on Saturday.
Johnny Crespo/AP
QUITO, Ecuador. A powerful earthquake struck southern Ecuador and northern Peru on Saturday, killing at least 14 people, leaving others trapped in rubble and sending rescue teams into rubble-strewn streets and downed power lines.
The US Geological Survey reported a magnitude 6.8 earthquake centered just off the Pacific coast about 50 miles south of Guayaquil, Ecuador’s second largest city. One person died in Peru and 13 died in Ecuador, where authorities also said at least 126 people were injured.
Ecuador’s president, Guillermo Lasso, told reporters that the earthquake “undoubtedly … caused alarm among the population.” A statement from Lasso’s office said 11 of the victims died in the coastal state of El Oro and two in the mountainous state of Azuay.

In Peru, the earthquake was felt from the northern border with Ecuador to the central Pacific coast. Peruvian Prime Minister Alberto Otarola said the 4-year-old girl died of head injuries she suffered when her house collapsed in the Tumbes region on the border with Ecuador.
According to the Secretariat of Risk Management, Ecuador’s emergency response agency, one of the victims in Azua was a passenger in a car that was hit by debris from a house in the Andean community of Cuenca.
In El Oro, the agency also reported that several people remained under the rubble. A two-storey house in Machala community collapsed before people could evacuate, a pier gave way and the walls of the building cracked, trapping an unknown number of people.

A policeman looks next to a car destroyed by debris following Saturday’s earthquake in the Ecuadorian city of Cuenca.
Xavier Caivinagua / AP
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Xavier Caivinagua / AP

A policeman looks next to a car destroyed by debris following Saturday’s earthquake in the Ecuadorian city of Cuenca.
Xavier Caivinagua / AP
The agency said firefighters worked to rescue people while the National Police assessed the damage, hampered by downed power lines that knocked out telephone and power service.
Machala resident Fabricio Cruz said he was in his third-floor apartment when he felt a strong shock and saw his television set hit the ground. He immediately came out.
“I heard my neighbors shouting and there was a lot of noise,” said 34-year-old photographer Cruz. He added that when he looked around, he noticed the collapsed roofs of the nearby houses.
The Ecuadorian government also reported damage to health centers and schools. Lasso said he will be leaving for El Oro on Saturday.
In Guayaquil, about 170 miles southwest of the capital Quito, authorities reported cracks in buildings and homes, and some walls collapsed. Authorities ordered the closure of three transportation tunnels in Guayaquil that anchor the metro area, home to more than 3 million people.
Videos shared on social media showed people gathering on the streets of Guayaquil and nearby communities. People reported objects falling into their homes.
One video posted online showed three of the show’s hosts thrown from their studio desks as the set rocked. They initially tried to shake it off as a small earthquake, but soon ran away from the camera. One host said the show was going to a commercial break, while another repeated, “Oh my God, oh my God.”
Luis Tomala was fishing with others when the earthquake struck. He said their boat started moving “like a racehorse, we got scared and when we turned on the radio we heard an earthquake”. That’s when his group, Tomala said, decided to stay at sea, fearing a tsunami might develop.
A report from Ecuador’s Adverse Events Monitoring Directorate ruled out the threat of a tsunami.
Peruvian authorities have reported that the old walls of an army barracks in Tumbes have collapsed.
Ecuador is particularly prone to earthquakes. In 2016, an earthquake further north on the Pacific coast in a more sparsely populated area of ​​the country killed more than 600 people.
Machala student Kathryn Cruz said her house shook so hard she couldn’t even get up to leave her room and run out into the street.
“It was terrible. I’ve never felt anything like it in my life,” he said.