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[PICTURES] Pakistan cricket squad safe after major earthquake near Christchurch

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Earthquake of magnitude 7.4 has struck near Christchurch in New Zealand. Pakistan cricket squad felt the tremor but all are safe and well</p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/797764507263234048">November 13, 2016</a></blockquote>
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I hope there is no loss of life or property in Christchurch.

Will this affect tour schedule??
 
Damn that's a huge earthquake

Hope everyone's safe. If I'm not wrong a couple PPers from there
 
Thank Allah! I immediately think of the families of these cricketers as they may not be with them. May Allah protect every human being on this earth.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Earthquake of magnitude 7.4 has struck near Christchurch in New Zealand. Pakistan cricket squad felt the tremor but all are safe and well</p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/797764507263234048">November 13, 2016</a></blockquote>
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Glad everyone is safe
 
http://tribune.com.pk/story/1229803/pakistan-team-escorted-hotel-new-zealand-earthquake/

Pakistan cricket team, who are currently in New Zealand for a two-match Test series, has been escorted off their hotel in Nelson after an earthquake of 7.4 magnitude struck Christchurch and adjoining areas on Sunday

According to reports, the squad was escorted out of their hotel and no casualties have been reported so far.

There are reports of aftershocks in the area and Pakistani players will be waiting in a designated safe zone until it is safe to go back inside their hotel.

“We are currently at Nelson and were scheduled to leave for Christchurch today morning but couldn’t depart due to the earthquake,” Waseem Bari, Manager Pakistan Cricket Team said while speaking to the Express News. The manager went on to say that the Pakistan Embassy contacted the team members and offered support.

Members of the Pakistani Women Team, who are also in New Zealand for a five-match ODI series, were also safe, Bari quoted the Pakistani embbassy officials as saying.

New Zealand Women win ODI series against Pakistan Women

The Misbahul Haq-led side are scheduled to play their first Test in Christchurch on November 17.
 
Team were still in Nelson when they felt the tremors. One player told me they couldn't stand up at one point as the ground was shaking so much.

Pakistan team is at the hotel and are scheduled to travel to Christchurch tomorrow.
 
Team were still in Nelson when they felt the tremors. One player told me they couldn't stand up at one point as the ground was shaking so much.

Pakistan team is at the hotel and are scheduled to travel to Christchurch tomorrow.

The Christchurch Test might be in some degree of doubt now. There was a huge quake several years ago, and the real venue at Lancaster Park was rendered unsafe by it.

Hagley Park is intrinsically safe, but there may be more aftershocks and the accommodation and TV facilities may be affected by this.
 
This is what the last major earthquake did to Christchurch's home of cricket, Lancaster Park.

IMG_4883.JPG

The ground remains unsafe and derelict, and the Hadlee Stand has been demolished.
 
Reports coming in of Tsunami sirens ringing in New Brighton and Sumner in Christchurch - which are beachside suburbs.

Let's hope it's just a precaution.
 
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State Highway 1 - the road from Nelson to Christchurch - is closed in North Canterbury near Cheviot due to earthquake damage.

If Pakistan haven't got flights from Nelson to Christchurch, they might face big delays getting there.
 
Feel for Christchurch.

It bore the brunt of a very harsh earthquake just a few years ago and bore huge loss.
 
New Zealand earthquake: Tsunami arrives after powerful tremor hits

A tsunami has hit after an earthquake struck New Zealand's South Island.

The US Geological Survey said the magnitude-7.8 quake hit just after midnight (11:02 GMT on Sunday), some 95km (59 miles) from Christchurch.

The tsunami arrived in the north-eastern coast about two hours later. Officials said the first waves may not be the largest, with tsunami activity possible for several hours.

Residents were warned to head inland or for higher ground along the coast.

A gauge at Kaikoura, 181 km (112 miles) north of Christchurch, measured a wave of two metres (6ft 5ins), according to Weatherwatch.co.nz.

Smaller waves are said to be arriving in Wellington and other areas, the website said.

Terrifying

Residents in the Chatham Islands, an archipelago 423 miles (680km) south-east of the mainland, were also being warned a wave would hit imminently by the civil defence.

Thousands of people have already evacuated their homes as aftershocks continue to hit the area, Radio New Zealand reported.
Debris from buildings are seen on a sidewalk past a cordon line in Wellington Image copyrightAFP

Others have taken to social media to offer people a safe bed for the night.

New Zealand lies on the notorious Ring of Fire, the line of frequent quakes and volcanic eruptions that circles virtually the entire Pacific rim.

Christchurch is still recovering from the 2011 earthquake that killed 185 people and destroyed the city centre.

The Herald newspaper said the tremor was felt all the way to Wellington, where sirens sounded and people fled buildings into the streets, some of them crying.

Early reports suggested some houses in Cheviot town, near the epicentre, have been damaged.

A tweet with a tsunami warning from New Zealand's Civil DefenceImage copyrightTWITTER

Advice from New Zealand's Civil Defence Ministry on what to do in an earthquakeImage copyrightTWITTER

But Chris Hill, a fire officer in Cheviot, said officials had gone door to door evacuating residents and found "everyone seems okay".

He told RadioNZ: "There's a lot of debris in houses, but at this stage it doesn't look like anything too bad has happened."

New Zealand's GeoNet suggests the earthquake may have been only a magnitude-5.5 tremor.

A resident of Christchurch said the tremor lasted a "long" time.

"We were asleep and woken to the house shaking, it kept going and going and felt like it was going to build up," she told AFP news agency.

A magnitude-7.1 quake struck 169km (105 miles) north-east of Gisborne on the North Island in September, sparking a tsunami warning. It caused some damage to property, but no injuries.


Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-37967178

Not good :(
 
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This is a much bigger earthquake than the 6.3 magnitude one which destroyed central Christchurch in 2011, but is centred between Christchurch and where Pakistan are currently holed up in Nelson.

The trunk roads are damaged and closed, and I'd be pleasantly surprised if the First Test goes ahead in what is already an earthquake-disabled city.

People's lives are much more important than a game, and the likelihood of big aftershocks for the next few days makes the Test potentially a hindrance to a troubled region.
 
The epicentre of this much larger quake seems to be at Cheviot, 70 miles from Christchurch. In terms of aftershocks, that's probably too close for comfort.

It strikes me that NZ Cricket need to find out where Sky TV's outside broadcast trucks are currently located.

If they are already in Christchurch, we may well get a game. If they are on the North Island, it might even be worth seeing if a pitch can be prepared in time at Auckland or Napier or Wellington.
 
Hey guys I live in Christchurch. the earthquake was big but not very violent,like being on a ship, nothing like the big one from 2011.

The Test will definatly still be on.
 
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The epicentre of this much larger quake seems to be at Cheviot, 70 miles from Christchurch. In terms of aftershocks, that's probably too close for comfort.

It strikes me that NZ Cricket need to find out where Sky TV's outside broadcast trucks are currently located.

If they are already in Christchurch, we may well get a game. If they are on the North Island, it might even be worth seeing if a pitch can be prepared in time at Auckland or Napier or Wellington.

Hopefully everyone is okay. Auckland is the most north of all those cities, so that's probably the best option.
 
Our prayers for the safety of the people in the area and our players, Ameen
 
Hey guys I live in Christchurch. the earthquake was big but not very violent,like being on a ship, nothing like the big one from 2011.

The Test will definatly still be on.

Nice to hear. Hopefully the damage is minimal this time around.
 
Pakistan team shocked but safe after Christchurch earthquake

Karachi: The Pakistani players and officials were shaken on Sunday when a 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck Christchurch and its adjoining areas with manager Wasim Bari describing it as a terrifying experience.

"We are staying at a hotel in Nielsen, where we were playing our tour match but today when the earthquake came it was a terrifying experience as everything was shaking badly and we were safely escorted out of the hotel," Bari said from New Zealand.

"The hotel staff took great care of us and quickly evacuated us from our seventh floor rooms and have now taken us to a safe zone until the Tsunami warnings are over," he said.

Pakistan's only 3-day tour match before the first test at Christchurch from November 17 was also washed out on the final day on Sunday in Nielsen and Bari said this had deprived the players a great opportunity to acclimatise to the conditions in New Zealand.

"Most of the players were in their rooms watching the India and England test match when it came, the quake was a powerful one and the windows and doors were banging around and it was shaking as we were rushed out. But everyone has settled down now and we also called up the women's team in Christchurch to find out if they were okay," the former Test captain said.

Pakistan is in New Zealand for a two-test series while the women's team is also in New Zealand for a five match one-day series and are already three down in the rubber.

Bari said the Pakistan team would reach Christchurch on Monday and hoped the weather would hold up.

"It rained throughout our stay in Nielsen so we are hoping to see some sunshine and clear weather in Christchurch. Obviously, if conditions are wet it is not to our liking," he said.

Christchurch is the biggest city on New Zealand's South Island. A 6.3 quake there in February 2011 killed 185 people and caused widespread damage.

The US Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said there was no tsunami threat from Monday's quake.

Bari said that the Pakistani players were looking forward to the challenge of continuing their good test form in New Zealand and Australia as well.

"We have a very settled side for Tests and I think we are very well prepared this time for the different conditions even though our tour match was washed out completely," he added.

http://zeenews.india.com/cricket/pa...fe-after-christchurch-earthquake_1949375.html
 
Pakistan management say their cricketers are fine after a "scary" overnight earthquake, and are expecting to fly to Christchurch as scheduled on Monday afternoon for their first test against the Black Caps.

The team's operations manager, Shahid Aslam, said the players were all safe and well after they were jolted by the 7.5 magnitude quake in their Nelson hotel just after midnight.

New Zealand Cricket had been in touch to check on their welfare, but as yet there had been no change to their travel plans.

Pakistan's touring cricketers are scheduled to fly from Nelson to Christchurch on Monday for Thursday's first test at Hagley Oval.

Wellington's Basin Reserve was being inspected by officials, with a strong likelihood the four-day Plunket Shield match between Wellington and Central Districts, scheduled to start at 10.30am on Monday, would be delayed or postponed.

The Pakistan team was scheduled to fly to Christchurch at 12.30pm on Monday to begin preparations for Thursday's first test.

"At the moment, we are flying to Christchurch as planned. All is good, we are all safe," Aslam said.

"It was a bit scary for everyone. We all went down to the lobby and went through the safety procedure."

Aslam was awaiting further instruction from NZC, who were in a conference call on Monday morning to discuss what impact the quake would have on the tour and the Plunket Shield match.

Pakistan manager Wasim Bari:

"Some of the boys were in prayer, some were watching the India-England test on TV when we felt the windows shake. The whole room began to shake," he said.

"We were on the sixth and seventh floor, and evacuated immediately. The hotel staff was very helpful. We are all safe."

Pakistan are yet to play a match on tour after their three-dayer against New Zealand A in Nelson was abandoned without a ball bowled due to rain.

http://i.stuff.co.nz/sport/cricket/...aiting-word-from-nz-cricket-after-scary-quake
 
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The actual magnitude was 7.8 started at 00:02 for approximately 2 mins. This was the first time I felt the quake for so long, believe me, it was terrible. Everything is fine in Christchurch but 2 people died in Kaikoura which is around 2 hours north of Christchurch. All the houses in and around the beach side have been evacuated until further notice.

As there are no casualties reported in Christchurch, I am sure everyone from the Pakistan women team is fine. I bet they are s#it scared as they are staying on the 13th floor of a hotel which is standing on a TC2 land. They would have experienced more shake than anyone else. There were more than 100 aftershocks until this morning, 45 of them supposed to be of a magnitude 3.5+. Unlike other Christchurch residents, I am sure they would have stayed up all night due to the shake.
 
The Wellington v Central Districts match at the Basin Reserve in Wellington has been delayed due to earthquake damage affecting the trains and buses.

There is talk that the Basin Reserve might step in and host Thursday's Test if necessary instead if Christchurch cannot cope. There is the Wellington v CD pitch ready to go!

The issue with Christchurch is partially aftershocks, but primarily whether the infrastructure can cope with a Test so soon after such a major quake has cut off State Highway 1 and done other damage.
 
I was once in an earth quake which was only 4.5 on the Richter scale, needless to say I legged it like Bolt.


Can't imagine what a 7.8 feels like.


Hoping and praying for the safety of the players and the residents of Christchurch.
 
Hope everyone is safe in Christchurch and no casualties are there.
 
The start of the Plunket Shield match between the Wellington Firebirds and the Central Stags at the Basin Reserve has been delayed in the wake of the earthquake which rocked the capital overnight.

Scheduled to start this morning, the four-day first-class match will be postponed until at least tomorrow to allow engineers to assess the venue for damage, and quantify any safety concerns arising from the shake.

A start tomorrow will be contingent upon, 1) approval from structural engineers, and 2) the go-ahead from Wellington local authorities.

The other two Plunket Shield matches scheduled to start today, at Invercargill and Tauranga, are proceeding as planned.

Similar safety evaluations are ongoing at Christchurch’s Hagley Oval and Nelson’s Saxton Oval ahead of the WHITE FERNS’ One Day International against Pakistan, and the BLACKCAPS Test match against Pakistan, respectively.

Both matches are scheduled to start on Thursday.

New Zealand Cricket will continue to monitor the status of each of those international venues, and liaise with the appropriate authorities ahead of the fixtures.

Both Pakistan touring parties, as well as the Pakistan Cricket Board, are being constantly updated on the current situation.
 
I was once in an earth quake which was only 4.5 on the Richter scale, needless to say I legged it like Bolt.


Can't imagine what a 7.8 feels like.


Hoping and praying for the safety of the players and the residents of Christchurch.

The strongest I have experienced is 5.6 this year and the whole house was moving like a pendulum. Though, I have experienced 7.8 in a simulator and I could barely stand. I hope everyone is OK.

Not sure if both teams are in the right state of mind to play a match so soon.
 
Pakistan cricketers abandon hotel rooms for safety of team room during earthquakes

http://www.newshub.co.nz/sport/vide...ty-of-team-room-during-earthquakes-2016111417

The Pakistan cricket side fled their separate hotel rooms as Monday morning's quake struck, opting to sleep in the team room as a group.

The second-ranked Test side in the world have had a disjointed first week in New Zealand, with the scheduled practice match against New Zealand A abandoned without a ball being bowled and then Monday morning's earthquake causing some of the players to abandon their hotel rooms for the safety of the team room.

"It was about midnight and everything started shaking and we were on the sixth and seventh floor of the hotel - so yeah, it was pretty scary,"
said coach Mickey Arthur. "The boys raced downstairs, and most of the guys actually slept down in the team room as they were too scared to go back to their rooms."

"An earthquake and a tsunami warning - it's all happened for us, you've really turned it in for us here in New Zealand."

Arthur believes his players will put the last week behind them when they finally get out on the training paddock tomorrow in Christchurch - weather permitting. "They will put it behind them soon as they get out on the training ground tomorrow. Hopefully we get some good weather and we can really put in a good session tomorrow and get ready for the first Test."

The Pakistan side head into the series with the Blackcaps with huge confidence off the back of a Test series win in England, and Arthur says the players have really embraced the challenge of achieving better results out of the subcontinent.

"The guys have played well. They really know their roles and operate really well within their boundaries. I've been really impressed with the way they go about it."

Arthur doesn't read too much into the home side's struggles in India as all teams struggle there, and he said the Blackcaps are a dangerous side on home soil.

The first Test is scheduled to begin on Thursday morning at Hagley Oval in Christchurch.
 
He he, looks like some of the boys were watching the India-Eng match. Nice to know that all of them are safe though. Must be hell of a scary feeling when you're up in the 7th floor and the building starts shaking..
 
Thank god it was not centered in any major city, it would have been far more devastating than it already is. Felt it as far as Auckland.
 
There were 2 quakes first one was 7.5-7.8 , second one 6.2-6.5
 
Pics of players taken after quake.
 

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Pakistan test to go ahead after NZ quake

Link

The first test between New Zealand and Pakistan is set to go ahead in Christchurch this week, despite a massive earthquake which killed at least two people and caused major infrastructure damage.

A New Zealand cricket spokesman confirmed Monday that the test would begin at Hagley Oval on Thursday as planned after the venue and teams' accommodation were checked and found to be safe.

The 7.8-magnitude quake, one of the most powerful ever recorded in New Zealand, hit just after midnight (1100 GMT Sunday) near the South Island town of Kaikoura, about 180 kilometres north of Christchurch.

New Zealand pace bowler Matt Henry was asleep at home in Christchurch when the quake struck.

"I was lying in bed and woke up to quite a long rumble," he said.

"It was a bit scary. They're hard to get used to."

Henry said the cricket would be a welcome distraction to help people take their minds off what had happened

"It always brings a community together and for a brief moment you can get back to a bit of normality, so it's probably a good timing to have a test match this week," said Henry.

The Pakistan touring squad felt the tremors in their hotel in Nelson, about 200 kilometres from the quake's centre.

"Some of the boys were in prayer, some were watching the India-England test on TV when we felt the windows shake," team manager Wasim Bari told ESPN Cricinfo.

"The whole room began to shake. We were on the sixth and seventh floor, and evacuated immediately. We are all safe," added the former test wicketkeeper.

The Pakistan women's team, who are also touring New Zealand, were on the 13th floor of a hotel in Christchurch when the tremors began.

Basit Ali, their manager, told Pakistan's Geo News they were all safe.

"It was so horrible and players were scared, we immediately moved out of (the) hotel. Players were without slippers even," he was reported as saying.

They are due to face the New Zealand women's team in the fourth one-day international at Nelson's Saxton Oval on Thursday.
 
Update on Pakistan’s Men and Women’s Cricket Team after Earthquake in New Zealand

Lahore-November 14, 2016:

A spokesman of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has expressed that PCB’s management has established a contact with Pakistan’s Men and Women’s Cricket team touring New Zealand for a bilateral series after an earthquake of high intensity hit the country on Sunday. Both teams management in a telephonic conversation conveyed Subhan Ahmad, COO, PCB about the safety and overall playing conditions in New Zealand in the wake of an earthquake. They said, “The players and management are safe and the conditions are quite conducive over there”.

It is to be noted, Mian Afrasiab Mehdi Hashmi Qureshi, High Commissioner of Pakistan to New Zealand is in constant contact with both the teams and facilitating them in best possible way. Chairman PCB Shaharyar M. Khan and Chairman Executive Committee Najam Sethi have also expressed satisfaction over the safety of the players.
 
Wow i shudder to think if an earthquake of this magnitude hits South asia. I mean its happened before and we saw the damage

1) Our lands are densely populated
2) structure are not earthquake proof
 
The Plunket Shield match between the Wellington Firebirds and the Central Stags at the Basin Reserve, delayed by a day after the earthquake on Monday morning, has been abandoned.

Frequent aftershocks in the capital have left players sleep-deprived and anxious, and in no fit state to start the game.

Although the Basin Reserve has been assessed as safe by structural engineers, and the match has been given the go-ahead by local authorities, New Zealand Cricket has decided proceeding with the game would be unfair on the players involved.

Options for re-playing the four-day match will be considered by NZC over the coming week.

Advice from Christchurch, venue for the first Test between the BLACKCAPS and Pakistan, and Nelson, where the WHITE FERNS will play Pakistan women, is more positive - with both matches to start on Thursday as scheduled.
 
The Plunket Shield match between the Wellington Firebirds and the Central Stags at the Basin Reserve, delayed by a day after the earthquake on Monday morning, has been abandoned.

Frequent aftershocks in the capital have left players sleep-deprived and anxious, and in no fit state to start the game.

Although the Basin Reserve has been assessed as safe by structural engineers, and the match has been given the go-ahead by local authorities, New Zealand Cricket has decided proceeding with the game would be unfair on the players involved.

Options for re-playing the four-day match will be considered by NZC over the coming week.

Advice from Christchurch, venue for the first Test between the BLACKCAPS and Pakistan, and Nelson, where the WHITE FERNS will play Pakistan women, is more positive - with both matches to start on Thursday as scheduled.
Reading between the lines, the domestic match at Wellington has been cancelled so that the Basin Reserve (and hotel capacity) can be on standby to host the First Test if aftershocks at Christchurch make it impossible to host the match.

The Basin only hosts 7000 people, so a game could be hosted as soon as outside broadcast facilities could be moved there. Walk up ticket sales would be plenty.

Just a contingency plan, but the ground has passed a safety check and the pitch is already ready.
 
Im not to concerned about the safety of Hagley oval. Its essentially a embankment all the way around and a small stand which was built post devastating earthquakes.
 
Besides wellington was damaged worse by the quake and is now cut off by flooding. Wouldnt be any safer to have it at the basin.
 
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