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Shallow 6.3-magnitude quake hits northwest China

This file photo shows nomads herding their livestocks with their caravan across a plain in Altay, farwest China's Xinjiang region. A strong 6.3-magnitude earthquake rattled Xinjiang on Saturday, injuring at least 17 people according to state media

A strong 6.3-magnitude earthquake rattled China's northwestern Xinjiang region on Saturday, injuring at least 17 people according to state media. The quake, at a shallow depth of 9.8 kilometres (six miles), had its epicentre 99 kilometres south of the city of Dushanzi, the US Geological Survey said -- in a remote, mountainous area. But the tremor was felt strongly in Xinjiang's regional capital of Urumqi nearly 300 kilometres (180 miles) away, as well as in the major cities of Dushanzi and Kuitun, China Central Television said. At least 17 people were reported injured, one of them seriously, it added. Many of the victims were hurt when houses collapsed, it said, and others were tossed from their beds. The quake struck at 5:07 am (2107 GMT Friday) and eight aftershocks occurred within 90 minutes, the biggest measuring 3.9 in magnitude, China News Service said. Rescue teams were immediately dispatched to populated areas hit by the quake, CCTV said. The south Xinjiang railway was affected, it reported, but details were not immediately clear, and electricity was cut off in some quake-hit areas. The China Earthquake Networks Centre measured the quake at 6.6 on the Richter scale. Xinjiang is a vast region with a population of around 20 million, of whom some nine million are Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking, mainly Muslim ethnic minority.