5.3-magnitude quake rocks Greece's Mount Athos religious enclave
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A 5.3-magnitude earthquake on Saturday rocked the Greek Orthodox
religious enclave of Mount Athos in northern Greece, Athens' Institute of
Geodynamics said.
The undersea quake had a depth of just 12.5 kilometres (7.7
miles) and struck northwest of the enclave's administrative capital of Karyes
in the Halkidiki peninsula, the institute said on its website.
It was felt in surrounding areas, and several aftershocks
followed.
"We are well, people should not be worried," Mount
Athos governor Alkiviadis Stefanis told state TV ERT.
One man visiting a monastery was taken to the hospital with a
hand injury after running and falling, he said.
A fire department source in Athens told AFP that the area's
four fire engines had been sent out in search of possible damage.
The tremor dislodged plaster and damaged chimneys at some
monasteries, Stefanis said.
Grigoris Tasios, head of the Halkidiki hoteliers
association, told ERT the tremor had not affected tourist infrastructure.
Seismologist Costas Papazachos told news portal NewsIT that
the Halkidiki peninsula has seen a "steady" seismic activity in the past
months.
Mount Athos, an Orthodox spiritual centre since 1054, has
enjoyed an autonomous status since Byzantine times.
Known as the Holy Mountain in Greece, the community has
around 20 inhabited monasteries, some of which are over 1,000 years old.


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