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Earthquake Slams Peru, Killing At Least 4

A U.S. tourist was among the confirmed fatalities.
A woman observes the damage in her home on August 15, 2016 in the Andean town of Yanque in southern Peru caused by a 5.3 magnitude earthquake that struck this remote picturesque region in the state of Arequipa on Sunday night.At least four other people also died and 68 were injured, most by toppling buildings. Rescue and aid efforts have been hampered by more than 60 replica aftershocks that have rocked the area, which is popular with tourists, in the past 24 hours. / AFP / Jose Sotomayor Jimenez (Photo credit should read JOSE SOTOMAYOR JIMENEZ/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP via Getty Images
A woman observes the damage in her home on August 15, 2016 in the Andean town of Yanque in southern Peru caused by a 5.3 magnitude earthquake that struck this remote picturesque region in the state of Arequipa on Sunday night.At least four other people also died and 68 were injured, most by toppling buildings. Rescue and aid efforts have been hampered by more than 60 replica aftershocks that have rocked the area, which is popular with tourists, in the past 24 hours. / AFP / Jose Sotomayor Jimenez (Photo credit should read JOSE SOTOMAYOR JIMENEZ/AFP/Getty Images)

LIMA, Aug 15 (Reuters) - A 5.3 magnitude shallow earthquake killed at least four people, including a U.S. tourist, and injured dozens when it rocked a copper-producing region popular with trekkers late on Sunday, authorities said.

The quake struck just 8 kilometers (5 miles) deep in the Caylloma province of the Andean region Arequipa and at least five aftershocks shook the region anew on Monday, the Geophysical Institute of Peru said. The USGS reported the earthquake as having a 5.4 magnitude.

Hundreds of houses, many made of adobe, collapsed as the tremor downed electrical distribution and phone lines in several towns, the National Civil Defense Institute (Indeci) said. Irrigation canals, health clinics, schools and highways were also damaged.

A 66-year-old U.S. man staying at a hotel in the town of Yanque was among the four confirmed casualties, according to Indeci.

Members of Peru's National Institute of Civil Defense and Peru's Air Force load a cargo plane with aid to be delivered to the Caylloma province of the Andean region Arequipa.
Guadalupe Pardo / Reuters
Members of Peru's National Institute of Civil Defense and Peru's Air Force load a cargo plane with aid to be delivered to the Caylloma province of the Andean region Arequipa.

The Caylloma province is home to Peru’s Colca Canyon, one of the deepest in the world and a draw for trekkers.

Copper mines in Arequipa operated by Southern Copper Corp and Freeport McMoRan Inc were unaffected by the quake, representatives of both companies said.

Vice President Martin Vizcarra traveled to Caylloma to oversee the distribution of humanitarian aid as the government of President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski prepared to declare an emergency in the region, state news agency Andina reported.

A man walks by toppled houses on August 15, 2016 in the Andean town of Yanque in southern Peru.
AFP via Getty Images
A man walks by toppled houses on August 15, 2016 in the Andean town of Yanque in southern Peru.

Local authorities were setting up tents in town squares and soup kitchens to help families left homeless, Indeci said.

The quake struck a day before the ninth anniversary of a 2007 earthquake in Peru that killed hundreds in the region of Ica.

Earthquakes are common in Peru, but many homes are built with precarious materials that cannot withstand them.

(Reporting By Teresa Cespedes, Marco Aquino and Mitra Taj; Editing by Bill Trott and Sandra Maler)

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