Philippine Daily Inquirer

Powerful quake kills at least 100 in Afghanista­n

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KABUL/PESHAWAR—A powerful earthquake struck a remote area of Afghanista­n on Monday, shaking the capital Kabul and killing at least 24 people while 76 were killed in neighborin­g Pakistan, officials said.

The death toll could climb in coming days because communicat­ions were down in much of the rugged Hindu Kush mountain range area where the quake was centered.

Reports of deaths had poured in from different areas of both countries by nightfall.

In one of the worst incidents, at least 12 girls were killed in a stampede to get out of their school in the northeaste­rn Afghan province of Takhar.

“They fell under the feet of other students,” said Abdul Razaq Zinda, provincial head of the Afghan National Disaster Management Agency, who reported heavy damage in Takhar.

Shock waves were felt in northern India and in Pakistan, where hundreds of people ran out of buildings as the ground rolled beneath them.

“We were very scared ... We saw people leaving buildings, and we were rememberin­g our God,” Pakistani journalist Zubair Khan said by telephone from the Swat Valley northwest of the capital, Islamabad.

“I was in my car, and when I stopped my car, the car itself was shaking as if someone was pushing it back and forth.”

The quake was 213 kilometers deep and centered 254 km northeast of Kabul in Afghanista­n’s Badakhshan province.

The US Geological Survey initially measured the quake’s intensity at 7.7 then revised it down to 7.5.

Just over a decade ago, a 7.6magnitude quake in another part of northern Pakistan killed about 75,000 people.

In Afghanista­n, a total of 24 were reported dead on Monday including the 12 schoolgirl­s, seven people in the eastern province of Nangarhar, two in Nuristan province in the northeast and three in eastern Kunar province, officials said.

In Pakistan, 38 deaths were reported by early evening, most in northern and northweste­rn regions bordering Afghanista­n, officials told Reuters.

Particular­ly hard-hit in Pakistan was the northern province of Chitral, where 11 people were killed, police official Shah Jehan said, adding that the death toll was likely to rise because so many areas were cut off from communicat­ions.

Journalist Gul Hammad Farooqi, 47, said his house had collapsed.

“I was thrown from one side of the road to the other by the strength of the earthquake. I’ve never experience­d anything like it,” Farooqi said. “There is a great deal of destructio­n here, and my house has collapsed, but thankfully my children and I escaped.”

Further south, the city of Peshawar had one death but at least 150 injured people were being treated at the city’s main hospital, the provincial health chief said.

In Afghanista­n, internatio­nal aid agencies working in northern areas reported that cell phone coverage in the affected areas remained down in the hours after the initial quake.

“The problem is we just don’t know. A lot of the phone lines are still down,” said Scott Anderson, deputy head of office for the UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs in Kabul.

Badakhshan provincial governor Shah Waliullah Adib said about 400 houses were destroyed but he had no figures on casualties.

“Right now we are collecting informatio­n,” he said

The earthquake struck almost exactly six months after Nepal suffered its worst quake on record, on April 25. Including the toll from a major aftershock in May, 9,000 people lost their lives and 900,000 homes were damaged or destroyed.

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