Mexico City has been hit by a series of power outages after a
5.8-magnitude earthquake struck in the centre of Mexico, with officials
saying there was no other damage reported.
The quake struck just
after midnight local time (0519:GMT), southwest of the city of Huitzuco,
in Guerrero state, according to Mexico's National Seismological
Service.
Some restaurants and residential buildings in the capital were evacuated as a precautionary measure.
Buildings shuddered in the city, a witness told the Reuters news agency.
Although
the earthquake was felt strongly in the capital, "in the preliminary
report, Mexico City was not damaged," Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera wrote
on his Twitter feed.
The US Geological Survey (USGS) downgraded its initial measurement of the quake to magnitude 5.8 from 6.0.
USGS
geophysicist Randy Baldwin that the earthquake occured
at a depth of about 55km, which would help minimise damage.
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