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Rare earthquake triggers panic in Melbourne; no injuries reported

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MELBOURNE : A rare quake rattled south-eastern Australia yesterday, shaking buildings, knocking down walls and sending panicked Melbourne residents running into the streets.

The shallow 5.9-magnitude tremor hit east of the country's second-largest city at the start of the working day and was one of the largest to hit the country in decades.

With Melbourne beginning its eighth week of pandemic lockdown and braced for a third straight day of violent anti-vaccine protests, most residents were at home when the quake struck.

Mr Zume Phim, 33, owner of Melbourne's Oppen cafe, said he rushed out into the street as the tremor hit.

"The whole building was shaking. All the windows, the glass, was shaking - like a wave of shaking," he told AFP. "I have never experienced that before. It was a little bit scary."

In a popular shopping area around Melbourne's Chapel Street, masonry debris tumbled from buildings and littered the roads.

Bricks and rubble surrounded a burger restaurant and large sheets of metal hung off the restaurant awning.

"We were fortunate that nobody was in the restaurant at the time," the restaurant said in a Facebook post.

The quake's epicentre was near the rural town of Mansfield, about 200km north-east of Melbourne.

Victoria's State Emergency Service said it had received 100 calls for assistance "largely related to minor structural damage to chimneys and facades on buildings".

"It was quite violent... everyone was kind of in shock," Melbourne cafe worker Parker Mayo, 30, said.

Sizeable earthquakes are unusual in Australia.

At magnitude 5.9 and a depth of 10km , this was "the biggest event in south-east Australia for a long time", Professor Mike Sandiford, a geologist at the University of Melbourne, said.

The quake "would have caused billions of dollars in damage had it been under Melbourne", he added. - AFP

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