Relief agencies were
battling Wednesday to reach cold and hungry survivors of a devastating
earthquake that has killed more than 360 people in Pakistan and Afghanistan,
with entire communities still cut off in the mountainous region. Desperate victims appealed
for aid after Monday's 7.5 magnitude quake ripped through the region,
destroying thousands of homes, triggering landslides and stampedes, and
knocking out communication lines.
Rescuers
and the Pakistan military are now in a race against time to reach victims
stranded in remote regions before the freezing weather conditions claim more
lives.
"No
one came to help us. We are sitting in open area. There was rain yesterday and
no one came to help us," said Jamil Khan, a 24-year-old quake victim in
Shangla, one of the worst hit districts of Pakistan's northwestern Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa province.
AFP report continues:
Aid
workers also fear the unstable security situation in quake-stricken areas in
Afghanistan, many of which are effectively controlled by the Taliban, could
hamper relief efforts despite a pledge from the insurgents they would help
deliver aid.
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Pakistan's
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Tuesday pledged compensation for those whose
homes have been destroyed during a trip to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which
has seen the bulk of the casualties so far.
Pakistan's
confirmed death toll stands at 248 people with more than 1,600 injured, but
authorities fear the number could spike with communication from some regions,
such as the district of Kohistan, still cut off.
The
military has been leading Pakistan's rescue efforts, sending in medical teams,
tents and rations to affected areas and evacuating some people by helicopter.
But
in more remote areas residents have had to fend for themselves, with children
and the elderly helping to dig through piles of rubble for survivors and locals
appealing for blankets, warm clothes and food to survive.
"We
lost everything. We could not save anything," said another Shangla
resident, 60-year-old Hakim Khan, adding that the only thing they had been able
to retrieve from the rubble was the body of a dead boy.
- 'Consolation and
strength' -
Afghan
officials said at least 115 people were confirmed dead and hundreds more
injured, with casualties reported from around half a dozen of the country's 34
provinces, and more than 7,600 homes reported damaged.
The
US is among several countries that have offered to provide humanitarian
assistance to Afghanistan, and Chinese state media said on Wednesday Beijing
stood ready to help both countries if needed.
"What
is most needed at this stage is medical assistance to the injured, medical
equipments and shelter for the affected populations," said Kjersti
Haraldseide, acting country director for Afghanistan for the Norwegian Refugee
Council agency.
Antoine
Sagot-Priez, country head of French aid agency Premiere Urgence Internationale,
said they had already seen a "large influx of casualties" at one of
their hospitals in the badly hit Afghan province of Kunar.
The
World Health Organization said Tuesday it has distributed medical supplies to
help thousands of people in the worst-hit parts of Afghanistan, and more trauma
kits for 1,200 patients will be dispatched in the coming days.
The
quake was centred near Jurm in northeast Afghanistan, 250 kilometres (160
miles) from the capital Kabul and at a depth of 213.5 kilometres, the US
Geological Survey said.
Afghanistan
is frequently hit by earthquakes, as it lies near the junction of the Eurasian
and Indian tectonic plates. Monday's quake came six months after a huge earthquake
in Nepal and an aftershock killed almost 9,000 people.
Large
swathes of Badakhshan, the remote province where the epicentre is located, and
other quake-stricken areas are effectively controlled by the Taliban, which
Western charities said is hindering access to victims.
The
militants Tuesday urged aid organizations not to hold back in delivering
emergency relief and vowed their fighters would provide "complete
help" in the affected areas.
On Tuesday Pope Francis
offered prayers for the dead and missing, invoking the "divine blessings
of consolation and strength" for aid workers trying to help the victims.
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