Strong earthquake in Lorca, Spain leaves at least 10 dead

An earthquake in the Southern Spanish town of Lorca has left at least ten people dead, with hundreds others having spent the night outdoors.

The magnitude-5.2 tremor toppled several buildings after striking at a depth of just 1km (0.6 miles), 120km south-west of Alicante, around two hours after a 4.4-magnitude tremor.

Lines of cars lay crushed under tonnes of rubble and a hospital was evacuated as a precaution.

It is not clear how many people were injured, although Spanish media say there are dozens.

Spanish TV captured dramatic images of a church bell tower crashing to the ground, landing just metres from a cameraman.

Shocked residents and workers rushed out of buildings and gathered in squares, parks and open spaces. Old buildings were badly damaged. People remained outside during the night for fear of another tremor.

"The whole of the centre of Lorca has been seriously damaged," a delegate from the regional government of Murcia told national radio.

"There are thousands of very disorientated people."

A doctor told the online edition of El Pais that she and her colleagues went into the streets and treated people with serious injuries, many of them "unconscious".

"The ambulances could not reach them. They took more than 40 minutes," the doctor said.

The earthquakes were felt over a wide area.

"Unfortunately, we can confirm... deaths due to cave-ins and falling debris," Lorca Mayor Francisco Jodar said.

"We are trying to find out if there are people inside the collapsed houses," he added.

A number of aftershocks have been felt in the region after Wednesday's quake, and authorities fear the death toll could rise.

Spain's Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has reportedly deployed emergency military units to the scene.

The quake appears to be the most serious to hit Spain in about 50 years. Hundreds of earthquakes hit the country every year but most of them are too small to be noticed.

Murcia is the country's most seismically active area and suffered tremors in 2005 and 1999.

Murcia is close to the large faultline beneath the Mediterranean Sea where the European and African continents meet.