A shallow 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck China's far western region of Xinjiang on Friday, the US Geological Survey said, with three people killed according to Chinese officials. The epicentre was in Pishan county, 164 kilometres (102 miles) north-west of the city of Hotan and 131 kilometres south-east of Shache, known as Yarkand in Uighur, the language of the local mainly Muslim minority.
It was 20 kilometres deep according to USGS, which initially gave the magnitude as 6.1 while Chinese seismologists recorded it at 6.5. A series of aftershocks followed with the strongest measuring 4.8, it said. The area is on the edge of the vast Taklamakan desert, but the civil affairs ministry said late Friday just three people had died, revising down its earlier toll of six. The state news agency Xinhua said 43 people had been injured and cited officials saying an airport in Hotan had been closed.
Li Hua, a worker at a state-owned farm in Pishan, which has a population of 258,000, mainly Uighurs, told Xinhua that he felt the quake strongly, with his fourth-floor apartment shaking for about a minute. "I'm feeling dizzy," it quoted Li as saying. State broadcaster China Central Television showed footage of items falling off shelves in a local supermarket when the quake struck, and cracked walls at a fire station.
China's air force deployed a drone to survey the quake zone, the first time the country has used unmanned aerial vehicles on such a mission, Xinhua said. The government was sending 1,000 tents and disaster relief materials to the area, the civil affairs ministry said. China is regularly hit by earthquakes, particularly in its south-western provinces of Sichuan and Yunnan.