JAKARTA, Nov. 25 (Xinhua) -- Indonesia lifted tsunami warning after a strong quake with magnitude of 6.8 struck West Nusa Tenggara province in eastern part of Indonesia on Monday morning, the country's Meteorology and Geophysics Agency said.
"The tsunami waning has been lifted," said a text message from the agency received by Xinhua.
The quake jolted at 02:53 local time (1953 GMT) with epicenter at 48 kilometers southwest Raba town of the province and at 45 kilometers under sea bed, an official of the agency Ali Amran said.
The quake was felt at 4 to 5 MMI (modified mercally intensity), a scale that is enable to shake things and cracks building, at Bima town, Mataram, the capital of the province, he said.
The quake was also felt at Denpasar, the capital of Bali province, Indonesia's tourist resort, at 3 MMI, said Amran.
One 5-year-old toddler was killed, 17 other people were wounded and buildings collapsed in the quake-hit area, local television reported early Monday.
Indonesia is laid at a vulnerable zone called "the Pacific Ring of Fire" where two continental plates, stretching from the Western Hemisphere through Japan and Southeast Asia, meet that cause frequent volcanic movements.