Friday, April 19, 2024 | Shawwal 9, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
25°C / 25°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Rescuers scramble to reach survivors as quake toll climbs

1325334
1325334
minus
plus

JATLAN: Rescuers battled along badly damaged roads and combed through toppled buildings on Wednesday to reach victims of an earthquake that killed at least 38 people and injured hundreds more in northeast Pakistan.


Authorities were still assessing the quake’s impact in villages around the city of Mirpur in Kashmir, but in some the immediate damage was evident.


After a night of heavy rain compounded the misery of survivors, hundreds gathered to attend the funerals of residents killed near Mirpur, about 130 kilometres southeast of the capital, Islamabad.


“It was like doomsday for us. We lost a number of our near and dear ones,” Muhammad Azam said at a funeral for a neighbour. “Our loved ones will never come back.”


The 5.2 magnitude quake was not as strong as several that have struck Pakistan over the years, but the epicentre was very shallow — which generally causes more damage.


Near Mirpur, a well-developed city known for its palatial residences, many roads were destroyed, while bridges, mobile phone towers and electricity poles were also badly damaged.


The village of Jatlan on the outskirts of Mirpur appeared to be one of the worst affected.


There, residents sifted through debris and assessed the damage, with large cracks defacing walls in the houses that still stood, and brick fences reduced to rubble.


“I lost everything,” said Abdullah Khan, whose three-bedroom home was flattened. The Pakistan military continued to lead search and rescue operations, and the death toll continued to rise as authorities reached more remote villages to assess the damage.


Muhammad Tayyab Chaudhry, the top local official, said at least 37 people had been killed — 33 in Mirpur and four in the neighbouring district of Bhimber.


Earlier, Lieutenant General Mohammad Afzal of the National Disaster Management Agency (NDMA) said one person had also been killed in the nearby Punjabi city of Jhelum.


“Some 350 people were wounded, 80 of them critically,” he told a press conference.


Teams of doctors had arrived in the area, while the NDMA had also sent hundreds of tents, bottles of water and food rations.


Afzal said hundreds of houses had been damaged — 136 of them “completely” — while 14 kilometres of road were “badly affected”. Engineers were rushing to make repairs.


Information Minister Firdous Ashiq Awan gave a higher injury toll of 500, and told reporters that survivors would be offered compensation.


Overnight showers turned already-damaged roads into muddy thoroughfares where livestock roamed freely.


In Mirpur, however, life was quickly returning to normal and most of the well-built structures in the city showed little sign of damage.


— AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon