Red Cross revises death toll - five dead in Costa Rica

Red Cross revises death toll - five dead in Costa RicaSan Jose  - A strong earthquake, with a magnitude of 6.1 on the Richter scale, rocked Costa Rica killing at least five people and wounding more than 90 others, Red Cross officials said Friday.

Earlier in the day, the Red Cross confirmed 14 deaths and later said as many as 32 people were killed. The organization revised its figures and admitted the earlier numbers were a result of poor communications and the inability to access many affected areas.

A Red Cross official said they were still trying to confirm 18 deaths that had been reported by locals in Cinchona, a rural, mountainous area with dense woodland that was devastated by the quake and is about 60 kilometres north of capital San Jose.

The quake took place on Thursday at 1:21 pm (1921 GMT) with an epicentre about 35 kilometres north of San Jose. About 10 kilometres west lies the 2,704-metre high Poas Volcano, a popular tourist attraction.

More than 2,200 people had to leave their homes for shelters and other emergency accommodation. Many areas were still impossible to reach by road on Friday.

"In some stretches between Vara Blanca and Cinchona, the road practically disappeared," Pedro Pablo Quiros, president of the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity, told the media after an aerial tour of the area.

Costa Rican television showed large mountain areas destroyed by landslides and several collapsed houses near Vara Blanca and Cinchona.

Hundreds of tourists visit Vara Blanca and Cinchona every day. At least 300 tourists, many of them foreigners, were cut off in Vara Blanca.

More than 1,200 aftershocks have been recorded since the quake took place.

The National Emergency Commission sounded a red alert in the provinces of San Jose, Alajuela, Heredia and Cartago, where the quake was felt most strongly.

Costa Rican President Oscar Arias was planning an aerial survey of the affected areas and to visit some of the quake-hit towns Friday. dpa

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