Friday, March 27, 2026
22.1 C
New Delhi

Fresh magnitude-6.2 quake strikes Afghanistan as death toll tops 2,200

A magnitude 6.2 earthquake struck southeastern Afghanistan on Thursday, marking the third major tremor in the region since Sunday, according to the German Research Centre for Geosciences.

The series of quakes has now claimed over 2,200 lives, with thousands more injured and displaced.

Naqibullah Rahimi, spokesperson for the Nangarhar health department, told Reuters that the epicentre was in the remote Shiwa district, near the Pakistan border. Initial reports indicated damage in the Barkashkot area, though assessments were still underway.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

The quake, which struck at a depth of 10 km (6 miles), follows two earlier shocks that flattened entire villages across Kunar and Nangarhar provinces, leaving more than 3,600 people injured and tens of thousands homeless.

Rescue efforts continued on Thursday, with workers still pulling bodies from the rubble. The Taliban administration confirmed the updated toll at 2,205 dead and 3,640 injured, as aid groups warned of a worsening humanitarian crisis.

The United Nations and other agencies have flagged an urgent need for food, shelter, and medical supplies, with survivors facing a dire situation amid dwindling resources and ongoing aftershocks.

“Everything we had has been destroyed,” Reuters quoted Aalem Jan, whose house in the worst-affected province of Kunar was flattened by the tremors, as saying.

“The only remaining things are these clothes on our backs,” said Jan. His family sat under trees with their belongings piled next to them.

The first earthquake, a magnitude 6.0 tremor, struck on Sunday at a shallow depth of 10 km (6 miles), causing widespread destruction across Afghanistan’s Kunar and Nangarhar provinces. It was one of the country’s deadliest quakes in recent years.

A second magnitude 5.5 quake hit on Tuesday, triggering landslides, cutting off access to remote villages, and disrupting ongoing rescue operations.

Authorities estimate that over 6,700 homes have been destroyed, and the United Nations has warned the death toll may still rise, with many people feared trapped under the rubble as time to reach survivors runs out.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

Humanitarian needs are “vast and growing rapidly”, said the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

“Up to 84,000 people are directly and indirectly affected, with thousands displaced,” it added, citing initial figures.

In some of the worst-affected villages in Kunar province, two out of three people had been killed or injured, while 98% of buildings were either destroyed or damaged by the tremors, Reuters reported, citing an assessment by British-based charity Islamic Relief Worldwide.

Afghanistan is prone to deadly earthquakes, particularly in the Hindu Kush mountain range, where the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates meet.

With homes made mostly of dry masonry, stone, and timber, some families preferred to sit out in the open rather than return home as aftershocks continued at regular intervals.

The houses gave little protection from the quakes, in ground left unstable by days of heavy rain, said the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

Resources for rescue and relief work are tight in the South Asian nation of 42 million people, pulverised by war, poverty, and shrinking aid, where harsh weather presents a further challenge.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

US President Donald Trump’s funding cuts to foreign aid and donor frustration over the Taliban’s restrictive policies towards women and its curbs on aid workers have worsened Afghanistan’s isolation.

The World Health Organisation pointed to a funding gap of $3 million, saying it was critical to keep medicines, trauma kits, and essential commodities flowing amid rising demand.

The UN World Food Programme has funding and stocks to support the survivors for just four more weeks, its country head, John Aylieff, told Reuters on Wednesday.

Jacopo Caridi of the Norwegian Refugee Council called for donors to go beyond life-saving relief to ensure Afghans a chance at a future beyond perpetual emergency.

“The earthquake should serve as a stark reminder: Afghanistan cannot be left to face one crisis after another alone,” he said.

With inputs from agencies

End of Article

Go to Source

Hot this week

‘Alive & protesting’: MP in Janata regime turns 100

Pandit Ramkishan NEW DELHI: A month ago, Pandit Ramkishan sat on a dharna in Rajasthan, demanding better quality water for his home district, Bharatpur. Read More

Baldoni scores wins in legal battle with Blake

‘It Ends With Us’ director, Justin Baldoni, secured another win in his ongoing legal battle with Blake Lively and in a defamation suit against his former publicist, Stephanie Jones. Read More

Invisible buildings: Why Switzerland marks out homes with tall poles weeks before construction

In Switzerland, construction does not begin with concrete or cranes, but with something far more unusual. Empty frameworks trace the future. Read More

‘Strait Of Trump, I Mean Hormuz’: US President Takes Jibe At Iran As War Rages On

The US President jokingly referred to the Strait of Hormuz as the ‘Strait of Trump’ as he assured that America is achieving its military objectives in the Iran war. Read More

‘Evidence insufficient’: Spl Delhi court clears ex-MP Darda, son & others in coal ‘scam’ case

Representative image NEW DELHI: A special Delhi court on Friday acquitted former Congress MP Vijay Darda, his son Devendra, ex-coal secretary H C Gupta and others in a coal block allocation case, ending over a decade of trial after Read More

Topics

‘Alive & protesting’: MP in Janata regime turns 100

Pandit Ramkishan NEW DELHI: A month ago, Pandit Ramkishan sat on a dharna in Rajasthan, demanding better quality water for his home district, Bharatpur. Read More

Baldoni scores wins in legal battle with Blake

‘It Ends With Us’ director, Justin Baldoni, secured another win in his ongoing legal battle with Blake Lively and in a defamation suit against his former publicist, Stephanie Jones. Read More

Invisible buildings: Why Switzerland marks out homes with tall poles weeks before construction

In Switzerland, construction does not begin with concrete or cranes, but with something far more unusual. Empty frameworks trace the future. Read More

‘Strait Of Trump, I Mean Hormuz’: US President Takes Jibe At Iran As War Rages On

The US President jokingly referred to the Strait of Hormuz as the ‘Strait of Trump’ as he assured that America is achieving its military objectives in the Iran war. Read More

‘Evidence insufficient’: Spl Delhi court clears ex-MP Darda, son & others in coal ‘scam’ case

Representative image NEW DELHI: A special Delhi court on Friday acquitted former Congress MP Vijay Darda, his son Devendra, ex-coal secretary H C Gupta and others in a coal block allocation case, ending over a decade of trial after Read More

Supreme Court rebukes courts for naming rape survivors

Supreme Court NEW DELHI: Supreme Court has rebuked trial and high courts for disclosing the identity of rape survivors in their orders and directed them to ensure that names of survivors and family members are not mentioned in court Read More

Clavicular arrest update: Florida streamer allegedly instigated fight between women on stream

Image Via Instagram Looksmaxxing streamer Clavicular, whose real name is Braden Eric Peters, is in jail in Florida after police said he encouraged a fight between two women on his live stream. Read More

Big US Setback: 10 Troops Injured, Multiple Aircraft Damaged In Iranian Attack On Saudi Air Base

The injured US troops were inside a building on the base when the attack took place, which damaged several American refuelling aircraft, officials said. Read More

Related Articles