Irish Independent

Hunt for survivors as Iran’s deadliest quake kills 400

- Raf Sanchez

IRANIAN rescue teams were last night struggling to reach isolated villages cut off by landslides after a 7.3 magnitude earthquake killed more than 400 people and injured almost 7,000.

The powerful earthquake struck the Iran-Iraq border region on Sunday night, shaking the Middle East as far as Israel and Turkey, but the worst of the devastatio­n hit western Iran.

Iran said at least 407 people had been killed but the death toll was expected to rise as rescuers reached more remote parts of the mountainou­s Kermanshah province. Another 6,700 people were injured.

At least seven people were killed in Iraq’s Kurdish region and more than 300 were reportedly taken to hospital with injuries.

The earthquake was the worst in Iran since 2005, when 612 people were killed in the country’s south-east. It was also the deadliest earthquake of 2017, overtaking the 369 people killed in Mexico in September.

Iran’s government said it was mobilising the army, militia forces and the elite Revolution­ary Guard Corps to help with relief efforts but as the sun set last night rescuers were still struggling to reach parts of the disaster zone.

Ayatollah Ali Khameini, Iran’s supreme leader, exhorted rescue teams to move as quickly as possible while there was still a chance of saving those buried by the quake. “It is the duty of the authoritie­s in these first hours with all their determinat­ion and ability to help the injured, especially those trapped under the rubble,” he said.

Aid workers used rescue dogs and heat sensors to try to find those trapped inside collapsed buildings while helicopter­s and heavy constructi­on equipment were brought in.

More than 200 people were reportedly killed in Sarpol-e Zahab, a city of around 34,000 people which sits a few miles from the Iraqi border.

Photograph­s from the scene showed buildings collapsed and a mother weeping in the street as she held the body of her young daughter.

Another woman and her baby were pulled from rubble, according to local media.

In a video posted online yesterday, a resident said soldiers were working to help people without gloves or special equipment and there was no sign of rescue teams.

Destroyed

“There has been no help yet, neither food nor water, no clothing, no tents, there is nothing,” said another man. “Our electricit­y, water, gas, phone lines are out, everything is completely out, the whole city has been destroyed.”

Eshaq Jahangiri, one of Iran’s vice presidents, said many of the buildings that collapsed had been built under the Mehr Housing Project, a government building programme championed by Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, the former president. He said there would be an investigat­ion into the structures, built for poor Iranians as a part of Mr Ahmadineja­d’s populist domestic policies.

Boris Johnson, the UK foreign secretary, offered “deepest condolence­s” to both Iran and Iraq. “The UK stands ready to help the victims and the recovery effort,” said Mr Johnson, who is expected to visit Iran in the coming weeks.

The Pope and other world leaders also sent their sympathies. “Upon the injured and the emergency and civil authoritie­s engaged in rescue and recovery efforts, His Holiness invokes the divine blessings of consolatio­n and strength,” a Vatican spokesman said.

The Turkish Red Crescent dispatched 33 aid trucks to the Iraqi city of Sulaimaniy­ah while Turkey’s military flew aid and rescue workers into Iraq. Turkey said it was also prepared to help Iran if aid was requested.

The earthquake struck Iraq’s Kurdish region just weeks after fighting between Iraqi forces and Kurdish troops. Baghdad said it would help all Iraqis, regardless of the recent tensions.

Sherwana Castle, a historic 18th century fortress built by a Kurdish king, appeared to have been badly damaged by the quake. (Daily Telegraph, London)

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 ??  ?? A motorcycli­st rides by a damaged building in Darbandikh­an, Kurdistan
A motorcycli­st rides by a damaged building in Darbandikh­an, Kurdistan

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