More Than 2,000 Feared Dead in Landslide in Afghanistan
By AZAM AHMEDMAY 3, 2014
KABUL, Afghanistan — A day after a huge landslide buried much of a village in northeastern Afghanistan, there appeared to be little hope that any survivors would be found, Afghan officials said Saturday.
Local officials fear that more than 2,000 people are dead, entombed in a blanket of earth nearly 30 feet deep. Officials are expected to designate the site, in the remote village of Abi Barak in Badakhshan Province, a mass grave.
“There is no hope for those buried under the mud to be rescued,” said Mohammad Zikeria Sawda, a member of Parliament from Badakhshan, who visited the area on Saturday.
President Hamid Karzai declared Sunday a national day of mourning and ordered all flags flown at half-staff. He also asked that Afghans and aid groups come to the assistance of those affected by the landslides, calling the episode a “human tragedy.”
On Friday, the United Nations said that the death toll was at least 350. But a day after the initial landslides the exact number of dead remained unknown. Whole portions of Abi Barak have been buried by landslides, freezing entire families in place beneath the earth and debris and thwarting efforts to claw people out. It appeared that almost half of the mountain had simply fallen on top of Abi Barak.
“It is very difficult for rescue teams to operate and take out the bodies from the mud,” said Gul Ahmad Bedar, the deputy governor of Badakhshan. “Even the advance machinery cannot operate usefully in taking out the bodies from some of the areas.”
The possibility that yet another chunk of earth might cleave from the nearby mountain kept rescue workers on high alert.
The fear was not idle. Among the houses buried beneath the mud on Friday was one where a young couple had just been married, local officials told television news stations. When neighbors rushed to help, a second landslide trapped them as well.
“It buried so many families, including the house where the wedding party was going on,” said Hajji Sayedi, the district governor of Argo, where the village is. “When others rushed to rescue those trapped under the mud, another landslide went through the village, burying all those who came to help.”
Thousands of area residents have been evacuated from their homes. Aid agencies were mobilizing assistance on Saturday, with United Nations staff members coordinating the distribution of food, water and blankets and arranging for emergency shelter.
Officials said that about 500 villagers from the surrounding area were handed shovels and pickaxes to work alongside soldiers and others to unearth the bodies.
A shipment of 60 tons of food arrived Saturday from neighboring Kunduz Province. A delegation of Afghan officials also flew to the affected region on Saturday. Along with tents, the delegation delivered blankets and cash — up to $1,000 for each dead family member, officials said.
Afghanistan’s second vice president, Karim Khalili, expressed deep condolences at the site of the disaster and promised that the government would continue to do all it could to assist the survivors. He said 230 tons of wheat and flour had been delivered by the Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development.
The commander of the International Security Assistance Force, Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., offered his condolences on behalf of the international coalition and said his troops were ready to offer assistance if requested by Afghan authorities.
Mr. Bedar, the deputy governor, said: “We have been only able to discover 15 dead bodies — most of them women and children. We have one or two survivors from each family, mostly the elders who could flee when the mudslide happened.”
Different organizations have been trying to compile a list of the missing, with some estimates as high as 2,700. But with the village buried under as much as 200 feet of mud at the deepest points, it may be impossible to ever recover many bodies.
“We will offer the funeral prayers for those buried in the mud in absentia,” said the Badakhshan Province governor, Shah Waliullah Adeeb. “There is nothing else we can do.”
By AZAM AHMEDMAY 3, 2014
KABUL, Afghanistan — A day after a huge landslide buried much of a village in northeastern Afghanistan, there appeared to be little hope that any survivors would be found, Afghan officials said Saturday.
Local officials fear that more than 2,000 people are dead, entombed in a blanket of earth nearly 30 feet deep. Officials are expected to designate the site, in the remote village of Abi Barak in Badakhshan Province, a mass grave.
“There is no hope for those buried under the mud to be rescued,” said Mohammad Zikeria Sawda, a member of Parliament from Badakhshan, who visited the area on Saturday.
President Hamid Karzai declared Sunday a national day of mourning and ordered all flags flown at half-staff. He also asked that Afghans and aid groups come to the assistance of those affected by the landslides, calling the episode a “human tragedy.”
On Friday, the United Nations said that the death toll was at least 350. But a day after the initial landslides the exact number of dead remained unknown. Whole portions of Abi Barak have been buried by landslides, freezing entire families in place beneath the earth and debris and thwarting efforts to claw people out. It appeared that almost half of the mountain had simply fallen on top of Abi Barak.
“It is very difficult for rescue teams to operate and take out the bodies from the mud,” said Gul Ahmad Bedar, the deputy governor of Badakhshan. “Even the advance machinery cannot operate usefully in taking out the bodies from some of the areas.”
The possibility that yet another chunk of earth might cleave from the nearby mountain kept rescue workers on high alert.
The fear was not idle. Among the houses buried beneath the mud on Friday was one where a young couple had just been married, local officials told television news stations. When neighbors rushed to help, a second landslide trapped them as well.
“It buried so many families, including the house where the wedding party was going on,” said Hajji Sayedi, the district governor of Argo, where the village is. “When others rushed to rescue those trapped under the mud, another landslide went through the village, burying all those who came to help.”
Thousands of area residents have been evacuated from their homes. Aid agencies were mobilizing assistance on Saturday, with United Nations staff members coordinating the distribution of food, water and blankets and arranging for emergency shelter.
Officials said that about 500 villagers from the surrounding area were handed shovels and pickaxes to work alongside soldiers and others to unearth the bodies.
A shipment of 60 tons of food arrived Saturday from neighboring Kunduz Province. A delegation of Afghan officials also flew to the affected region on Saturday. Along with tents, the delegation delivered blankets and cash — up to $1,000 for each dead family member, officials said.
Afghanistan’s second vice president, Karim Khalili, expressed deep condolences at the site of the disaster and promised that the government would continue to do all it could to assist the survivors. He said 230 tons of wheat and flour had been delivered by the Ministry of Rural Rehabilitation and Development.
The commander of the International Security Assistance Force, Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., offered his condolences on behalf of the international coalition and said his troops were ready to offer assistance if requested by Afghan authorities.
Mr. Bedar, the deputy governor, said: “We have been only able to discover 15 dead bodies — most of them women and children. We have one or two survivors from each family, mostly the elders who could flee when the mudslide happened.”
Different organizations have been trying to compile a list of the missing, with some estimates as high as 2,700. But with the village buried under as much as 200 feet of mud at the deepest points, it may be impossible to ever recover many bodies.
“We will offer the funeral prayers for those buried in the mud in absentia,” said the Badakhshan Province governor, Shah Waliullah Adeeb. “There is nothing else we can do.”
Horrible.
And now I'm going to make jokes because that's all I got.
My first thought was, holy ****... did the US military do this? Even accidentally? Granted, I watch too much TV. Also, the new 24 comes out soon (FOX should pay me for such promotions!).
But anyways. Say for instance, the military was testing some sort of aerial or satelite (sic) weapon. Would they test it in that manner? Maybe there was a enemy presence in the town that made it a target? This would make for great deniability (**** you firefox, that's a word).
Hey, do you think they have UAV's that can snipe people? Maybe with some sort of guided munition...
maybe it was a tesla device of some sort
Disasters seem so unreal to me.
I live a sheltered life.
/crosses myself
and the ORTHODOX CROSS. The right way. Not that Catholic reversed bull****.
GET WITH THE PROGRAM
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