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Holly Hales

Shaken Vanuatu hit by new quake as Aussies return home

The RAAF has brought home hundreds of Australians who were stranded in Vanuatu after an earthquake. (HANDOUT/AUSTRALIAN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENCE)

Rattled Vanuatu has been hit by another earthquake after hundreds of Australians landed on home soil from the islands and the federal government announced a fresh round of financial assistance.

The latest magnitude 6.1 quake shook buildings on the country's main island at 2.30am on Sunday after it struck 30km west of the capital, Port Vila.

No tsunami alerts were triggered by the quake, unlike the initial 7.3 magnitude which hit on Tuesday.

Aid is loaded onto a C-17A Globemaster III bound for Vanuatu
Air force planes have delivered humanitarian aid before bringing Australians home from Vanuatu. (HANDOUT/AUSTRALIAN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENCE)

It came hours before the federal government announced an additional $5 million in humanitarian assistance to Vanuatu.

Hundreds of Australians landed on home soil from the island nation on RAAF flights which touched down in Brisbane on Sunday carrying 144 passengers.

In total, 568 holidaymakers, workers and other returnees have arrived back in Australia via military airlifts delivering humanitarian aid since Wednesday.

A scene of quake destruction in Vanuatu.
Vanuatu's quake clean-up includes assistance from Australian disaster response teams. (HANDOUT/DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND TRADE)

The two latest flights followed Airports Vanuatu's announcement it would reopen Port Vila International Airport to commercial airline operations on Sunday, offering some hope for increased aid and recovery resources.

The Australian government is working with Qantas, Virgin and Jetstar to resume flights.

Qantas and Virgin are both operating Port Vila-Brisbane services on Sunday and Jetstar is running a flight on the same route on Monday.

Two more final ADF flights from Vanuatu are planned for Sunday.

The magnitude 7.3 earthquake which struck Port Vila on Tuesday, killed at least 16 people, injuring at least 200 and causing massive damage to the city and surrounding areas.

Australian disaster response teams assisting in quake-struck Vanuatu.
Australian disaster response teams are assisting in quake-struck Vanuatu. (HANDOUT/DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND TRADE)

The number of deaths and injuries is expected to rise as search and rescue operations continue.

A potential health crisis also looms as aid workers believe about 20,000 people on the island cannot access clean water.

Vanuatu-based UNICEF water, sanitation and hygiene specialist Brecht Mommen warned illness would likely spread.

The extent of damage to Port Vila's water infrastructure remains unclear, with repair timelines uncertain.

The latest RAAF flights delivered 9.5 tonnes of emergency relief supplies on behalf of Red Cross, UN World Food Program, CARE, Save the Children and World Vision.

About 1000 people are estimated to have been displaced, according to the United Nations.

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