All Blacks legend McCaw joins quake rescue effort

A handout photo taken and received on November 14, 2016, show earthquake damage to State Highway One near Oaro on the South Island’s east coast.
A powerful 7.8-magnitude earthquake killed two people and caused massive infrastructure damage in New Zealand, but officials said they were optimistic the death toll would not rise further. The jolt, one of the most powerful ever recorded in the quake-prone South Pacific nation, hit just after midnight near the South Island coastal town of Kaikoura. / AFP PHOTO /

CHRISTCHURCH, United States (AFP) — Former All Blacks great Richie McCaw played a central role in ferrying rescue workers to the most devastated areas following a deadly earthquake which struck New Zealand Monday.

The double World Cup winner, now a commercial helicopter pilot, flew rescue and reconnaissance missions to Kaikoura after being woken in his Christchurch home by the powerful 7.8 quake.

Christchurch, which was devastated by an earthquake five years ago, is 182 kilometres (113 miles) south of Kaikoura which bore the brunt of the latest destruction.

“Like everyone else, I got woken up at midnight … yeah a bit scary,” he told the New Zealand Herald after taking search crews from Christchurch to Kaikoura and ferrying rescuers to remote properties to check on residents.

He said he saw “big cracks in the road, cracks in the side of the hills, and obviously slips”.

“At one point, the railway was way out over the sea. It had been pushed out by slips. It would not have been a nice place to be at midnight last night.”

The severe quake, which was felt across most of New Zealand, claimed two lives and caused massive infrastructure damage.

© 1994-2016 Agence France-Presse

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