Quake kills more than 3,000 in South Asia (AP) Updated: 2005-10-09 06:18
A senior Pakistani army officer said 200 soldiers were killed by debris and
landslides in Pakistan's portion of Kashmir. He spoke on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak to journalists.
About 1,000 civilians died in that region, said Sardar Mohammed Anwar, the
top government official in the area.
"This is my conservative guess, and the death toll could be much higher,"
Anwar told Pakistan's Aaj television station, adding that most homes in
Muzaffarabad, the area's capital, were damaged, and schools and hospitals
collapsed.
The death toll was at least 1,600 in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province,
said Akram Durani, the province's top elected official.
Ataullah Khan Wazir, police chief in the northwestern district of Mansehra,
said authorities there pulled the bodies of 250 students from the wreckage of
one girls' school in the village of Ghari Habibibullah. About 500 students were
injured, he said.
Dozens of children were feared killed in other schools.
Mansehra, about 90 miles northwest of the capital, was believed to be a
hotbed of Islamic militant activity during the time the Taliban religious
militia ruled neighboring Afghanistan. Al-Qaida operatives trained suicide
squads at a camp there, Afghan and Pakistani sources told The Associated Press
in 2002.
Afghanistan appeared to suffer the least damage. In its east, an 11-year-old
girl was crushed to death when a wall in her home collapsed, police official
Gafar Khan said.
A U.S. military spokesman, Lt. Col. Jerry O'Hara, said the quake was felt at
Bagram, the main American base in Afghanistan, but he had no reports of damage
at bases around the country.
The United Nations said it was working with Pakistan, Afghanistan and India
on an emergency response to the quake.
President Bush offered condolences, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
said the United States was ready to help.
"At this difficult time, the United States stands with its friends in
Pakistan and India, just as they stood with us and offered assistance after
Hurricane Katrina," Rice said in a statement.
In Pakistan, Musharraf and Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz ordered the military
to extend "all-out help" to quake-hit areas and appealed to the nation to stay
calm.
Helicopters and C-130 transport planes took troops and supplies to damaged
areas, but landslides and rain hindered rescue efforts.
The only serious damage reported in Pakistan's capital was the collapse of a
10-story apartment building, where at least 10 people were killed and 126 were
injured. Hospital doctors said the dead included an Egyptian diplomat, and the
Japanese Foreign Ministry in Tokyo said two Japanese were killed.
A man named Rehmatullah who lived near the apartment building said dust
enveloped the wreckage.
"I rushed down, and for some time you could not see anything because of the
dust. Then we began to look for people in the rubble," he said. "We pulled out
one man by cutting off his legs."
"It was like hell," added Nauman Ali, who lives in a nearby building. "I was
tossed up in my bed and the ceiling fan struck against the roof."
Aided by two large cranes, hundreds of police and soldiers helped remove
chunks of concrete, one of which was splattered with blood. One rescue worker
said he heard faint cries from people trapped in the rubble.
In Abbotabad, north of Islamabad, dozens of injured quake victims and other
patients lay on the lawn of the city hospital as staff with loudspeakers
appealed to the public for food and other relief supplies.
One of the injured was an 8-year-old boy, Qadeer, whose father, a farmer
named Jehangir, said the only buildings left standing in their village were a
mosque and a school. Qadeer lay unconscious, his right leg heavily bandaged.
Authorities laid out dozens of bodies under sheets in a damaged sports
stadium in Muzaffarabad.
|