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View of the collapsed
10-story apartment building after a severe earthquake jolted
Islamabad, Pakistan, Saturday, Oct 8, 2005.
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A huge earthquake triggered landslides, toppled an apartment building
and flattened villages of mud-brick homes Saturday, killing more than
3,000 people across a mountainous swath touching Pakistan, India and
Afghanistan.
The casualty toll from the 7.6-magnitude tremor was rising early Sunday
as rescuers struggled to dig people from the wreckage, their work made
more difficult as rain and hail turned dirt and debris into sticky muck.
The worst damage was in Pakistan, where the dead included 250 girls
crushed at a school and 200 soldiers on duty in the Himalayas.
For hours, aftershocks rattled an area stretching from Afghanistan
across northern Pakistan into India's portion of the disputed Himalayan
region of Kashmir. Hospitals moved quake victims onto lawns, fearing
tremors could cause more damage.
The earthquake, which struck just before 9 a.m., caused buildings to
sway for about a minute in the capitals of Afghanistan, Pakistan and
India, an area some 625 miles across. Panicked people ran from homes and
offices, and communications were cut to many areas.
Most of the devastation occurred in the mountains of northern Pakistan.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake was centered about 60 miles
northeast of the capital, Islamabad, in the forested mountains of
Pakistani Kashmir.
"It is a national tragedy," said Maj. Gen. Shaukat Sultan, Pakistan's
chief army spokesman. "This is the worst earthquake in recent times."
In Mansehra, a shopowner named Haji Fazal Ilahi stood vigil over the
body of his 14-year-old daughter, which lay under a sheet on a hospital
mattress. He said his wife, another daughter and a brother also died when
the family's house fell.
"I could see rocks and homes tumbling down the
mountains," said Ilahi, who was driving to his village of Garlat when the quake struck. "When I reached my village, there was nothing left
of my home."
(Agencies) |