A magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck the Turkey-Syria border region late on Monday, setting off panic and damaging buildings in Turkey's Antakya city.
The European Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) said the tremor struck at a depth of 2 km.
It comes two weeks after the region's worst earthquake in modern history left tens of thousands dead.
Two Reuters witnesses reported a strong quake and further damage to buildings in central Antakya, where it was centered. It was also felt in Egypt and Lebanon.
#Earthquake (#زلزال) M6.3 strikes 90 km W of #Aleppo (#Syria) 6 min ago. More info: https://t.co/ZEbPj8kvI5
— AllQuakes - EMSC (@EMSC) February 20, 2023


Hezbollah warns Israeli residents to evacuate towns near border
US House rejects war powers resolution, backs Trump on Iran war
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait intercept drones targeting territory
GCC and EU ministers urge immediate halt to Iranian attacks
India's tech state Karnataka bans social media for children under 16
Indonesia says it will withdraw from Board of Peace if it does not benefit Palestinians
Trump wants say on Iran's next leader
US, Venezuela agree to re-establish diplomatic ties
