December 2003, at 01:57 hrs GMT (05:27 hrs local time), an earthquake of magnitude 6.7 struck the city of Bam, Kerman Province in southeastern Iran. The number of casualties and overall affected is expected to be high due to most houses being built with mud. The media report that the earthquake may have killed at least 4,000 people in the city of Bam, whose population is 80,000. It is also reported that the earthquake destroyed 60 percent of the houses in the city of Bam and the medieval fortress, a massive, 2,000-year-old structure that sits on a cliff near the city and attracts thousands of tourists each year.
An UKFSSART team comprising of personnel from Kent, Hampshire and Essex have left the UK tonight on a specially chartered flight to Iran. The UKFSSART team is led by Simon Webb from the ODPM and Peter Crook (Hampshire Fire & Rescue Service). The team are well equipped for both search and rescue tasks, equipment includes sophisticated listening equipment, minature cameras, drills, cutting equipment, electrical generators and emergency shoring equipment that can be used to support damaged structures. The team also includes two experienced trauma-specialist doctors and limited medical supplies.