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Tuesday, 27 October 2015
After Earthquake In Afghanistan, A Complicated Rescue Mission
After Earthquake In Afghanistan, A Complicated Rescue Mission
A man clears rubble from the roof of his house in the Behsud
district of Jalalabad province, Afghanistan, on Tuesday.
Parwiz/Reuters/Landov
More than 300 people are dead the day after an earthquake hit
Afghanistan and shook surrounding countries. At least 2,000 people are
injured, NPR's Philip Reeves reports on Morning Edition.
"This
is a very remote landscape," Reeves notes, "and it can take a long time
before you find out exactly who's been impacted by a disaster of this
kind."
Injured Pakistanis are treated in a hospital in Peshawar on Tuesday.
Hasham Ahmed/AFP/Getty Images
The 7.5-magnitude quake struck the Hindu Kush mountains on Monday. It started about 130 miles underground, the U.S. Geological Survey says, lessening its potential blow.
Still,
at least 237 people have died in Pakistan and 74 in Afghanistan, The
Associated Press reports, citing country officials. Landslides and rough
terrain are making it difficult to reach people in need.
Afghan men carry a coffin of an earthquake victim for burial
in the Behsud district of Nangarhar province, Afghanistan, on Tuesday.
Parwiz/Reuters/Landov
The mountains also serve as a haven for militants, Reeves says.
The epicenter of the earthquake in fact was not far from Kunduz, which militants briefly held last month.
Tuesday, the Taliban told its fighters to help aid organizations distribute materials and expressed sympathy for the victims.
"This
recalls what happened in 2005," Reeves says, "where one militant group
in particular ... played a leading role in supplying aid and assistance
to earthquake victims in that earthquake, which killed more than 75,000
people. And that organization won quite a lot of public approval for so
doing."
Army soldiers load sacks of food aid on a helicopter to
distribute in earthquake-stricken areas in Peshawar, Pakistan, on
Tuesday.
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