Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Iran to probe homes destroyed by quake

- By Nasser Karimi and Mohammad Nasiri

SARPOL-E-ZAHAB, Iran — Iranian President Hassan Rouhani launched an investigat­ion Tuesday into why government housing built by his predecesso­r collapsed while others withstood a powerful earthquake near the border with Iraq that killed more than 530 people.

In the Kurdish town of Sarpol-e-Zahab, which was reconstruc­ted in the decades since the 1980s war with Iraq, the outer walls of apartment complexes tumbled away in the magnitude 7.3 earthquake Sunday night. The housing was built as a part of the “Mehr” or “kindness” project of former President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d.

Some now-homeless survivors simply wept outside, while others angrily showed Associated Press journalist­s the destructio­n done by the quake.

“Other buildings near our apartment are not damaged as much because they were built privately,” said Ferdows Shahbazi, 42, who lived in one of the Mehr buildings.

She sarcastica­lly added: “This is ‘kindness’ as the name suggests very well!”

Rescuers used backhoes and other heavy equipment to dig through toppled buildings in Sarpol-e-Zahab, home to more than half of the dead. The apartment complexes sit next to lush pastures in the almost entirely Kurdish province of Kermanshah, nestled in the Zagros Mountains along the border with Iraq.

Rescuers and residents alike stood on the remains of homes, looking through the rubble. Searchers used dogs to comb the debris — just as they have since Iran’s 2003 earthquake in Bam that killed 26,000 people — although some clerics insist the animals are unclean.

The quake badly damaged the Sarpol-e-Zahab hospital, forcing the army to set up field clinics. The quake also reportedly killed an unspecifie­d number of soldiers in a garrison.

Aside from the 530 people killed in Iran, 7,817 were injured, the state-run IRNA news agency reported. Health Minister Hassan Ghazizadeh Hashemi, who visited Kermanshah on Tuesday, warned that the death toll probably would rise.

“My feeling is that number will increase since victims were buried in many villages that their exact statistics will be announced in coming days,” he said, according to the semi-official ISNA news agency.

Rouhani inspected the damage in the province and offered his support.

“This was a pain for all Iranians,” he said. “Representi­ng the nation of Iran, I offer my condolence­s to the people of Kermanshah, and tell them that all of us are behind Kermanshah.”

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif thanked foreign countries offering to help but wrote on Twitter: “For now, we are able to manage with our own resources.”

Also touring the area was cleric Abdolhosse­in Moezi, a representa­tive of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Moezi said there was a need for more relief material and “security.” That was echoed by Nazar Barani, the mayor of the town of Ezgeleh, who told state TV his constituen­cy still had a “deep need” for food, medicine and tents. He said 80 percent of the buildings in the town had been damaged.

The temblor hit about 19 miles outside the eastern Iraqi city of Halabja, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, and struck 14.4 miles below the surface, a somewhat shallow depth that can cause broader damage.

Nine people were killed in Iraq and 550 were injured, all in the country’s northern, semiautono­mous Kurdish region, according to the United Nations.

Ahmadineja­d’s official channel on the messaging app Telegram, which is popular in Iran, called the accusation­s “media slander” and said those who circulated photos and videos of damaged Mehr homes were “clumsy charlatans.”

 ?? ATTA KENARE/GETTY-AFP ?? Building constructe­d in Sarpol-e-Zahab by Iran sustained more damage in the quake than privately built structures.
ATTA KENARE/GETTY-AFP Building constructe­d in Sarpol-e-Zahab by Iran sustained more damage in the quake than privately built structures.

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