At least two killed, hundreds injured in Iran earthquake

A strong magnitude 5.7 earthquake has left at least two people dead and about 370 injured in a remote area near Iran's North Khorasan province.
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The 2003 Bam earthquake killed at least 26,000 people and flattened the city [Getty]
A 5.7 magnitude earthquake near Iran's border with Turkmenistan killed at least two people, injured hundreds and caused widespread damage, state media reported on Sunday, citing the country's seismological centre.

The quake, which struck at 1800 GMT on Saturday in and around the city of Bojnurd, North Khorasan province, killed a 54-year-old woman and a teenage girl, ISNA news agency reported.

It left more than 370 people injured and damaged as many as 40 percent of houses in the area, leading to a power outage, it said.

The US Geological Survey put the strength of the quake at 5.8 magnitude, and said it occurred at a depth of 12.5 kilometres (7.8 miles).

The epicentre of the earthquake was just 50 kilometres from the border with Turkmenistan.

On 5 April, a 6.1 magnitude quake killed at least two people near Iran's second city Mashhad, which is located southeast of Bojnurd.

In January, a magnitude 5.3 earthquake killed four people in the village of Saifabad near the town of Khonj, about 1,000 km south of Tehran.

The region is on an active fault line stretching from Turkmenistan's capital Ashgabat into Iran's three provinces of north, central (Razavi) and south Khorasan, according to state news agency IRNA.

The last major earthquake to strike Iran was in 2003 at Bam, in the southeastern province of Kerman, which killed at least 26,000 people and flattened the city.