More than 270 killed in huge Pakistan quake | Inquirer News

More than 270 killed in huge Pakistan quake

/ 09:12 PM September 25, 2013

People rush out their apartments and offices after they felt a major earthquake that struck Baluchistan province in southwest Pakistan Tuesday. AP

AWARAN — Desperate villagers in southwest Pakistan clawed through the wreckage of their ruined homes Wednesday, a day after a huge earthquake struck, killing more than 270 people and creating a new island off the coast.

The 7.7-magnitude quake hit on Tuesday afternoon in Baluchistan province’s remote Awaran district — a dirt-poor expanse of land that is roughly the size of Wales.

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At least 271 people have been confirmed dead and more than 440 injured, according to the Provincial Disaster Management Authority and the Baluchistan government’s earthquake response control room.

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In the village of Dalbedi, the earthquake — Pakistan’s deadliest since the devastating Kashmir quake of 2005, which killed 73,000 — flattened some 250 houses, an AFP photographer said.

Bewildered villagers dug with their hands through the rubble of their mud houses in Dalbedi to retrieve what was left of their meagre possessions.

Their simple houses destroyed, they used rags, old clothes, sheets and tree branches to shelter their families from the sun.

Farmer Noor Ahmed, 45, said the tremors lasted for two minutes and turned buildings in the village into piles of mud.

“We have lost everything, even our food is now buried under mud and water from underground channels is now undrinkable because of excessive mud in it due to the earthquake,” he told AFP.

The death toll is expected to rise as rescue teams reach more villages in the area, which has been shaken by more than a dozen aftershocks.

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Jan Muhammad Buledi, spokesman for the Baluchistan government, told AFP that more than 300,000 people had been affected by the quake across six districts — Awaran, Kech, Gwadar, Panjgur, Chaghi and Khuzdar.

“People are still trapped under the rubble but it is a huge disaster and it will take time to reach and rescue all the people,” he said.

Teams were working to recover bodies but the priority he said was to move the injured to hospitals as soon as possible — a difficult task in a desolate area with minimal infrastructure.

“We are seriously lacking medical facilities and there is no space to treat injured people in the local hospitals,” Buledi said.

The army has rushed medical staff and troops to the devastated area to help with rescue efforts, along with seven tonnes of food and a tonne of medicine. Six helicopters are taking part in rescue work, the military said.

The scale of the territory involved is daunting. Awaran’s population is scattered over an area of more than 21,000 square kilometers (8,000 square miles).

Baluchistan makes up about 45 percent of Pakistan’s area but is the country’s least populated and least developed province. On top of the difficult terrain, the area is rife with separatist and Islamist militants as well as bandits.

Tremors were felt on Tuesday as far away as New Delhi and even Dubai in the Gulf, while people in the Indian city of Ahmedabad, near the border with Pakistan, ran into the streets in panic.

New island emerges

Tuesday’s quake caused a new island to appear close to the coastline at Gwadar, officials said, prompting astonished locals to rush to the shore to take a look.

“It looked very very strange to me and also a bit scary because suddenly a huge thing has emerged from the water,” Gwadar resident Muhammad Rustam told AFP.

The National Institute of Oceanography has sent a team to survey the island, which stands about 20 meters high.

Experts said a similar small island appeared at the same place in the sea after a major quake in 1945 but disappeared after some time.

In April, a 7.8-magnitude quake in southeast Iran, close to the border with Baluchistan, killed 41 people and affected more than 12,000 on the Pakistan side of the border.

Baluchistan, Pakistan’s largest but least populous province, is believed to have substantial gas and oil reserves.

But it is a flashpoint for growing violence against minority Shiite Muslims and has suffered attacks blamed on Taliban militants.

It also suffers from an ongoing separatist insurgency which began in 2004 when Baluch rebels rose up to demand a greater share of profits from the province’s mineral resources.

Originally posted at 3:02 p.m.

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