Bangkok Post

Rescuers scramble to reach survivors

At least 1,000 dead after Afghan quake

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SHARAN: Desperate rescuers battled against the clock and heavy rain yesterday to reach cut-off areas in eastern Afghanista­n after a powerful earthquake killed at least 1,000 people and left thousands more homeless.

Wednesday’s 5.9-magnitude quake struck hardest in the rugged east, downing mobile phone towers and power lines while triggering rock and mudslides which blocked mountain roads.

“Getting informatio­n from the ground is very difficult because of bad networks,” Mohammad Amin Huzaifa, head of informatio­n for badly hit Paktika province, told AFP yesterday, adding there was no immediate update to the death toll. “The area has been affected by floods because of heavy rains last night ... it is also difficult to access the affected sites.”

The disaster poses a huge logistical challenge for Afghanista­n’s new Taliban government, which has isolated itself from much of the world by introducin­g hardline Islamist rule that subjugates women and girls.

The aid-dependent country saw the bulk of its foreign assistance cut off in the wake of the Taliban takeover in August, and even before the earthquake the United Nations warned of a humanitari­an crisis that threatened the entire population.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the global agency has “fully mobilised” to help, deploying health teams and supplies of medicine, food, trauma kits and emergency shelter to the quake zone.

Government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid tweeted yesterday that aid flights had landed from Qatar and Iran, while Pakistan had sent trucks carrying tents, medical supplies and food across the land border.

The earthquake struck areas that were already suffering the effects of heavy rain, causing rockfalls and mudslides that wiped out hamlets perched precarious­ly on mountain slopes.

The UN humanitari­an coordinato­r for Afghanista­n, Ramiz Alakbarov, told reporters nearly 2,000 homes were likely destroyed — a huge number in an area where the average household size is more than 20 people.

“Seven in one room, five in the other room, four in another, and three in another have been killed in my family,” Bibi Hawa told AFP from a hospital bed in the Paktika capital. “I can’t talk any more, my heart is getting weak.”

Hospital director Mohammad Yahya Wiar said they were doing their best to treat everyone.

“Our country is poor and lacks resources,” he told AFP. “This is a humanitari­an crisis. It is like a tsunami.”

Footage released by the Taliban showed people in one village digging a long trench to bury the dead.

Even before the Taliban takeover, Afghanista­n’s emergency response teams were stretched to deal with the natural disasters that frequently strike the country. But with only a handful of airworthy planes and helicopter­s left since they returned to power, any immediate response to the latest catastroph­e is further limited.

“The government is working within its capabiliti­es,” tweeted Anas Haqqani, a senior Taliban official. “We hope that the Internatio­nal Community & aid agencies will also help our people in this dire situation.”

 ?? AFP ?? People queue to donate blood for earthquake victims being treated at a hospital in Sharan, Paktika province, on Wednesday.
AFP People queue to donate blood for earthquake victims being treated at a hospital in Sharan, Paktika province, on Wednesday.

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