After the quake, a
small island appeared off the coast near the port of Gwadar, witnesses
reported. People gathered on the beach to see the new island, which is about 9m
(30ft) high and 100m long, Gwadar Police Chief Pervez Umrani said. Balochistan
is Pakistan's largest but least populated province. The region is prone to
earthquakes, with at least 35 people killed in a 7.8-magnitude tremor that was
centred in south-eastern Iran in April. Mud houses The latest quake was so
powerful it was felt as far away as Karachi, Hyderabad, and India's capital,
Delhi.
Entire villages are reported to have been flattened in the impoverished and sparsely-populated district of Awaran. Balochistan government spokesman Jan Buledi said most of the fatalities were in Awaran town and the surrounding villages, and he warned that the death toll could rise. At least 340 people have been injured.
"We are seriously lacking
medical facilities and there is no space to treat injured people in the local
hospitals," Mr Buledi said. He said helicopters were airlifting the most
seriously injured to Karachi while others were being cared for in neighbouring districts.
Pakistan's military was among the first to respond to the crisis, having a
heavy presence in the area already because it is fighting a long-running
separatist Baloch insurgency. The army said it had sent more than 200 soldiers,
medical teams and tents from the regional capital Quetta, but the mountainous
terrain is said to be hampering the rescue operation
The quake was so powerful it was felt across Pakistan and India. These office workers in Karachi were forced to evacuate their building.
Awaran local
government official Abdul Rasheed Baluch said around 90% of houses in the
district had been destroyed. "Almost
all the mud houses have collapsed. We have been busy in rescue efforts for the
whole night and fear we will recover more dead bodies from under the rubble
during daylight," he said.
Many of the
casualties are said to be from Labach, on the northern outskirts of Awaran
town. Houses are also reported to have caved in in the district of Khuzdar. People
in the region mostly live in mud houses as opposed to multi-storey concrete
structures, says the BBC's Shahzeb Jillani. The few concrete buildings in the area mostly
house government offices, he adds. An emergency has been declared in Awaran and
another earthquake-affected district, Chagai.
BBC-
BBC-
0 comments:
Post a Comment