Death toll from Afghan earthquake jumps to 2,205 as aid agencies plead for funds

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The 6.0-magnitude quake struck several provinces of the mountainous and remote east Sunday night, leveling villages and trapping people under rubble.
Hope was quickly fading of finding survivors in the rubble of homes devastated by the weekend's powerful 6.0-magnitude quake in eastern Afghanistan, as emergency services struggled to reach remote villages on September 3.
An Afghan woman with an injured leg sits with her children Wednesday in the aftermath of an earthquake in Nangarhar province.AFP - Getty Images

Hundreds of bodies have been recovered from houses destroyed by a major earthquake in Afghanistan over the weekend, pushing the death toll to more than 2,200, a Taliban government spokesman said Thursday.

The 6.0-magnitude quake struck several provinces of the mountainous and remote east Sunday night, leveling villages and trapping people under rubble. The majority of the casualties has been in Kunar, where many live in steep river valleys separated by high mountains.

Taliban spokesman Hamdullah Fitrat, who provided the updated casualty figure of 2,205, said rescue and search efforts were continuing. “Tents have been set up for people, and the delivery of first aid and emergency supplies is ongoing.”

The rough terrain is hindering relief efforts. Taliban authorities have deployed helicopters and airdropped army commandos to help survivors. Aid workers have reported walking for hours to reach villages cut off by landslides and rockfall.

Funding cuts are also having an impact on the response.

The Norwegian Refugee Council said it had fewer than 450 staff in Afghanistan, whereas it had 1,100 in 2023, the date of the last major quake in the country. The council only had one warehouse remaining and no emergency stock.

“We will need to purchase items once we get the funding but this will take potentially weeks and people are in need now,” said Maisam Shafiey, the communications and advocacy adviser for the council in Afghanistan. “We have only $100,000 available to support emergency response efforts. This leaves an immediate funding gap of $1.9 million.”

Humanitarian organizations have called the latest disaster a crisis within a crisis.

Afghanistan was already struggling with the impact of climate change, particularly drought, a weak economy and the return of some 2 million Afghans from neighboring countries.

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