new earthquake in the region already devastated a few days earlier, no new deaths reported

There is definitely no respite. A new earthquake of magnitude 6.3 struck western Afghanistan on Wednesday October 11, according to the American Seismological Service (USGS), after that of Saturday which left more than 2,000 dead in the same region. The earthquake occurred at a shallow depth around 5:10 a.m. local time (2:40 a.m. BST), with its epicenter about 29 kilometers north of the city of Herat, the USGS said.

The impact of this new earthquake is not yet clear, at a time when thousands of people are homeless after their homes were destroyed on Saturday by the first earthquake of magnitude 6.3, followed by eight aftershocks. No new deaths were immediately reported.

Local and national officials gave conflicting figures on the number of deaths and injuries in Saturday’s quake, but the disaster management ministry said 2,053 people had died.

“We cannot give exact figures for the dead and injured because they are evolving”declared ministry spokesperson Mullah Janan Sayeq.

Read also: Earthquake in Afghanistan: searches continue, but hope of finding survivors is fading

Aid has reached isolated villages

The United Nations said Tuesday that the death toll stood at nearly 1,300 dead and nearly 500 missing, the majority of them women. The organization estimates that more than 12,000 people, members of 1700 families, have been affected, and that “100%” houses were destroyed in eleven villages in the rural district of Zenda Jan, located some 30 kilometers northwest of the city of Herat, capital of the province of the same name.

Trucks full of food, water and blankets reached isolated villages, where blue tents were pitched amid the ruins. “There are families who no longer have anyone alive”sighs Ali Mohammad, 50, about the village of Nayeb Rafi, which previously housed two thousand families. “There is no one left, not a woman, not a child, no one. »

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers The modalities of humanitarian aid in question after the earthquake which hit western Afghanistan

“There is not a single house left, not even a room where we could spend the night”Mohammad Naeem, 40, who lost twelve members of his family, including his mother, told Agence France-Presse.

The injured have nowhere to go

In Herat, 30 km southeast of the epicenter, Doctors Without Borders points out that the injured who need to leave the hospital have nowhere to go. Providing shelter on a large scale, as winter approaches, will be a challenge for the Afghan Taliban authorities, who took power in August 2021 and have tense relations with international aid organizations.

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Most homes in rural Afghanistan are made of mud and built around wooden support posts, with little steel or concrete reinforcement. Multigenerational extended families typically live under the same roof, meaning severe earthquakes can devastate communities.

Afghanistan is already suffering from a serious humanitarian crisis, with the widespread withdrawal of foreign aid following the return to power of the Taliban. Herat province, on the border with Iran, has around 1.9 million people and its rural communities are suffering from a years-long drought.

Earthquakes are common in Afghanistan, but Saturday’s was the deadliest to hit the poor, war-ravaged country in more than twenty-five years. In June 2022, a 5.9 magnitude earthquake left more than a thousand dead and tens of thousands homeless in the poor province of Paktika (southeast).

The World with AFP

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