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Quake kills 1,000 in Afghan

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Officials have warned that the already grim toll is likely to go up The disaster is a test for the Taliban govt shunned by the world community Expressing anguish, PM Modi said India is ready to provide relief at the earliest A powerful earthquake struck a rugged, mountainou­s region of eastern Afghanista­n early Wednesday, killing at least 1,000 people and injuring 1,500 more in the country’s deadliest quake in two decades, the state-run news agency reported. Officials warned that the already grim toll may still rise.

In the remote area near the Pakistani border, residents searched for survivors and the dead by digging with their bare hands through the rubble of collapsed stone and mudbrick houses, according to footage shown by the news agency Bakhtar. It was not immediatel­y clear if major rescue equipment was being sent — or even if it could reach the area.

The extent of the destructio­n among the villages tucked among the mountains was still not known. Rutted roads — difficult to pass in the best of times

— may have sustained significan­t damage, and a UNICEF official said landslides from recent rains have made access even more difficult.

At least 2,000 homes were destroyed in the region, where on average every home has seven or eight people living in it, the UN Deputy Special Representa­tive to Afghanista­n Ramiz Alakbarov told reporters. The disaster posed a major test for Afghanista­n’s Taliban government, which seized power nearly 10 months ago as the US and its NATO allies were carrying out their withdrawal from the country and has been largely shunned by the world community since. Rescuers rushed to the area by helicopter, but the response is likely to be complicate­d since many internatio­nal aid agencies left Afghanista­n after the Taliban takeover in August. Moreover, most government­s are wary of dealing directly with the group, a reluctance that could slow the deployment of emergency aid and teams.

In a rare move, the Taliban’s reclusive supreme leader, Haibatulla­h Akhundzada­h, who almost never appears in public, called for “the internatio­nal community and all humanitari­an organisati­ons to help the Afghan people affected by this great tragedy and to spare no effort to help the affected people.”

 ?? ?? Afghans look at destructio­n caused by the earthquake in the province of Paktika
Afghans look at destructio­n caused by the earthquake in the province of Paktika

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