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Aid trickles into quake-hit Iran villages

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Kouik: Iranian survivors of a powerful earthquake that killed more than 400 people pleaded on Wednesday for water, tents and other emergency supplies as aid trickled into remote villages near the Iraqi border.


The government ordered rescuers to keep searching for people trapped under the rubble following the 7.3-magnitude quake which struck the mountainous region late on Sunday, toppling buildings and leaving thousands homeless.


At least 432 people were killed in Iran, all in the western province of Kermanshah, and eight in Iraq, according to authorities in the two countries.


In total, nearly 8,200 people were reported to have been injured.


In villages north of the badly hit city of Sar-e Pol-e Zahab, a convoy of about 20 ambulances arrived with medicine while Red Crescent teams brought tents, water, food, and blankets.


But much of the assistance came from ordinary Iranians, some of whom travelled more than 100 kilometres from a neighbouring province.


“God bless them!” resident Abdol Gaderi, 45, said of the volunteers, but “we need running water, electricity, and mobile toilets”.


Villagers voiced fears of disease breaking out because of the corpses of animals under the rubble.


In Ghaleh Bahadori, where around 30 Red Crescent tents had been provided, residents pleaded for more help. In Iran alone, the quake is estimated to have caused damage of 26,000 billion Iranian rials (about $6.3 billion), Kermanshah provincial deputy governor Mojtaba Nikkerdar said, quoted by the ISNA news agency.


In total, about 30,000 homes were damaged or destroyed, according to the Iranian authorities.


Severe damage to social housing blocks in Sar-e Pol-e Zahab built under a scheme championed by former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sparked indignation on social media.


President Hassan Rouhani said those responsible would be held to account. “The fact that houses built by individuals ... are intact while buildings erected by the state are seriously damaged shows that there has been corruption,” he said, according to his official website.


Speaking a day earlier on the same subject, Rouhani had said that it was necessary to “look for the guilty parties and present them to the population”.


Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli told lawmakers that the authorities had sent 36,000 tents and another 10,000 would follow for families too fearful of aftershocks to sleep in their own homes, ISNA reported.


On Tuesday, Iran marked a day of mourning, with a black banner adorning the corner of images of the disaster broadcast by state television.


— AFP


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