A small earthquake hit northern Italy on Tuesday as the country is grappling with the COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak.
A 2.9-magnitude earthquake struck about 10 miles northwest of Pisa near Tuscany, said the European Mediterranean Seismological Center.
Local residents in the area “clearly felt vibrations from the ground” and a “roar from the subsoil,” ANSA wrote. It prompted numerous calls to firefighters.
The tremor comes as Italy works to stave off the COVID-19 outbreak across the country. More than 9,000 people have been infected while at least 450 deaths have been confirmed as of Tuesday by Italian authorities.
Extraordinary measures were announced by Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte on Monday evening to essentially quarantine the entire country. Travel between Italy’s regions and inside them has been banned unless it is necessary for work, health, or other serious reasons.
Italians’ “habits must be changed now,” Conte said. “We must all give up something for the good of Italy” and “we must do it immediately and we will only succeed if we will all work together and adapt to these stricter standards.”