The Boston Globe

Remote Moroccan villages struggling

Scenes of horror after devastatin­g Friday quake

- By Sam Metz and Mosa'ab Elshamy

TAFEGHAGHT­E, Morocco — The toll of the massive earthquake that devastated Morocco could be seen Monday in dozens of remote villages such as Tafeghaght­e, where more than half of the 160 inhabitant­s are thought to have died.

With most of the community flattened, survivors worked to clear debris, recover the dead, and steer the living away from buildings teetering on the edge of collapse from aftershock­s.

The villagers toiled in a scene of horror: The air was filled with the stench of dead cattle. Other animals remained trapped in debris. Bloody bandages were strewn around the streets. Although the community has received food and water, it needs much more.

“It’s a catastroph­e,” said survivor Salah Ancheu, who lives in nearby Amizmiz. “We don’t know what the future is. The aid remains insufficie­nt.”

The efforts in Tafeghaght­e mirrored those happening across the North African country's disaster zone as survivors worked alongside bulldozers to dig through rubble and hope dwindled of finding people alive under the wood-and-dirt homes that collapsed.

Friday's earthquake — the strongest in Morocco in more than a century — killed nearly 2,700 people.

Meanwhile, rescuers overseas waited for Morocco to let them help. So far, Moroccan officials have accepted government aid from just four countries — Spain, Qatar, Britain, and the United Arab Emirates.

Morocco’s Interior Ministry says officials want to avoid a lack of coordinati­on that “would be counterpro­ductive.”

The leader of one of several rescue teams waiting across Europe said Moroccan authoritie­s may remember the chaos that unfolded after a smaller quake in 2004, when internatio­nal teams overwhelme­d the airport and the damaged roads into the hardest hit areas.

Rescuers Without Borders’ founder Arnaud Fraisse said he is withdrawin­g the organizati­on’s offer to send nine people to Morocco because “our role is not to find bodies.”

Homes crumbled into dust and debris, choking out the air pockets that might allow some people to survive for days under rubble.

The United Nations estimates that 300,000 people were affected by the magnitude 6.8 quake, which was made more dangerous by its relatively shallow depth.

Most of the destructio­n and deaths were in Al Haouz province in the High Atlas Mountains, where steep and winding roads became clogged with rubble, leaving villagers to fend for themselves.

Khadija Babamou came from her home in Amizmiz to Tafeghaght­e to check on relatives. She covered her mouth and began to cry as she gripped her sister. “God save us,” she said.

Ibrahim Wahdouch lost two young daughters and two other family members. He said the village looked as if it had been bombed in a war.

“There’s not shooting but look around,” he said.

Those left homeless — or fearing more aftershock­s — have slept outside in the streets of the ancient city of Marrakech or under makeshift canopies in devastated Atlas Mountain towns like Moulay Brahim.

In Amizmiz, the larger town about 4 miles down a twisty road from Tafeghaght­e, residents cheered Sunday as soldiers arrived. The army units headed to the remote villages.

State news agency MAP reported that bulldozers and other equipment are being used to clear routes. Tourists and residents lined up to give blood. In some villages, people wept as boys and helmet-clad police carried the dead through the streets.

Morocco’s deadliest quake was a magnitude 5.8 temblor in 1960 that struck near the city of Agadir, killing at least 12,000. It prompted Morocco to change constructi­on rules, but many buildings are not built to withstand such shaking.

 ?? PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? As dozens of Moroccan villages wait for government aid, many residents are left to fend for themselves.
PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES As dozens of Moroccan villages wait for government aid, many residents are left to fend for themselves.

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