Karachi experiences 29th mild earthquake since June 1

Epicentre of quake was at depth of 11km away from northeast Malir, says National Seismic Monitoring Centre

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A Richter scale mearing the intensity of an earthquake. — Reuters/File
A Richter scale mearing the intensity of an earthquake. — Reuters/File

KARACHI: A low-intensity earthquake of 2.0 magnitude jolted several parts of Karachi on Thursday night as the port city has been experiencing a cycle of seismic activities since June 1.

The National Seismic Monitoring Centre of the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) said the epicentre of the quake was at a depth of 11 kilometres away from northeast Malir.

The earthquake struck the port city at 7:54pm, the seismic monitoring centre added.

However, no damage or injuries were reported, but the residents panicked after the tremors.

It is the fifth consecutive day the metropolis hit by earthquakes following tremors felt on three different occasions on Wednesday.

A day ago, Chief Meteorologist Amir Haider Laghari debunked speculations about high-intensity tremors in the coming days besides clarifying that no technology exists to predict earthquakes across the globe.

"Karachi has historically experienced earthquakes of 5.5 and 5.8 magnitude," said Laghari in a statement.

He detailed that mild quakes were originating due to activation of the Landhi fault line, which is going through an adjustment process.

He said that millions of earthquakes of this nature occur across the globe daily.

The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) chief also said that an ordinary person, even in developed countries like Japan, cannot make predictions about seismic activity.