Pakistan offers assistance as earthquake kills 920 in Afghanistan

In this photo released by a set-run news agency Bakhtar, Afghans look at destruction caused by an earthquake in the province of Paktika, eastern Afghanistan, Wednesday, June 22, 2022. (Bakhtar News Agency via AP)
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Updated 22 June 2022
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Pakistan offers assistance as earthquake kills 920 in Afghanistan

  • Wednesday’s quake deadliest since 2002, struck about 44 km from southeastern city of Khost near the border with Pakistan
  • Mounting rescue operation could prove a major test for Taliban, who have been cut off from much international assistance

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan offered assistance on Wednesday after an earthquake of magnitude 6.1 killed 920 people in Afghanistan early in the morning, disaster management officials said, with more than 600 injured and the toll expected to grow as information trickles in from remote mountain villages.
Photographs on Afghan media showed houses reduced to rubble, with bodies swathed in blankets lying on the ground.
“Our authorities and institutions are working to extend required assistance to Afghanistan in coordination with their relevant institutions,” the Pakistan foreign office said. “The people of Pakistan stand in strong solidarity with their Afghan brethren in this difficult time.”
Helicopters were deployed in the rescue effort to reach the injured and fly in medical supplies and food, an interior ministry official, Salahuddin Ayubi, told Reuters.




This photograph taken on June 22, 2022 and received as a courtesy of the Afghan government-run Bakhtar News Agency shows soldiers and Afghan Red Crescent Society officials near a helicopter at an earthquake hit area in Afghanistan's Gayan district, Paktika province. (AFP)

“The death toll is likely to rise as some of the villages are in remote areas in the mountains and it will take some time to collect details.”
Wednesday’s quake was the deadliest since 2002. It struck about 44 km (27 miles) from the southeastern city of Khost, near the border with Pakistan, the US Geological Survey (USGC) said.
Most of the confirmed deaths were in the eastern province of Paktika, where 255 people were killed and more than 200 injured, Ayubi added. In the province of Khost, 25 were dead and 90 had been taken to hospital.




Medics treating people in Afghanistan's Pakika province after deadly earthquake on June 22, 2022. (Bakhtar News Agency)

Haibatullah Akhundzada, the supreme leader of the ruling Taliban, offered his condolences in a statement.
Mounting a rescue operation could prove a major test for the Taliban, who took over the country in August and have been cut off from much international assistance because of sanctions.
Shaking was felt by about 119 million people in Pakistan, Afghanistan and India, the EMSC said on Twitter, but there were no immediate reports of damage or casualties in Pakistan.




This photo shows a damaged house after an earthquake in Afghanistan's Paktika province on June 22, 2022. (Social Media)

The EMSC put the earthquake’s magnitude at 6.1, though the USGC said it was 5.9.
Adding to the challenge for Afghan authorities is recent flooding in many regions, which the disaster agency said had killed 11, injured 50 and blocked stretches of highway.
The disaster comes as Afghanistan grapples with a severe economic crisis since the Taliban took over, as US-led international forces withdrew following two decades of war.
In response to the Taliban takeover, many nations imposed sanctions on Afghanistan’s banking sector and cut billions of dollars worth of development aid.
Humanitarian aid has continued, however, with international agencies, such as the United Nations, operating.
The UN’s office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) said Afghanistan had asked humanitarian agencies to help with rescue efforts, and teams were being despatched to the quake-hit area.
A spokesman of Afghanistan’s foreign ministry said it would welcome international help. Neighbouring Pakistan said it was working to extend assistance.
Large parts of South Asia are seismically active because a tectonic plate known as the Indian plate is pushing north into the Eurasian plate.
In 2015, an earthquake struck the remote Afghan northeast, killing several hundred people in Afghanistan and nearby northern Pakistan. In January, an earthquake struck western Afghanistan, killing more than 20 people.
 


Pakistan’s Sharif hopes to further ties with Bangladesh as Rahman takes oath as PM

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Pakistan’s Sharif hopes to further ties with Bangladesh as Rahman takes oath as PM

  • Tarique Rahman’s election comes amid a thaw in relations between Pakistan and Bangladesh
  • Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal also met Rahman after oath-taking, invited him to visit Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday said he hoped to further strengthen relations with Bangladesh as Tarique Rahman took oath as the country’s new premier.

Rahman was sworn in on Tuesday after his Bangladesh Nationalist Party’s landslide win in parliamentary elections last week, the country’s first since the massive 2024 uprising and a vote billed as key to the nation’s future political landscape after years of intense rivalry and disputed polls.

The 60-year-old, whose term will last for five years, is the son of former prime minister Khaleda Zia and former president Ziaur Rahman. He is also Bangladesh’s first male prime minister in 35 years. Since 1991, when Bangladesh returned to democracy, either Rahman’s mother or her archrival Sheikh Hasina had served as PMs.

His election as PM comes at a time when Pakistan and Bangladesh appear to be coming increasingly closer, following a thaw in their relations since the ouster of Hasina, who was widely viewed as an India ally. Ties between Bangladesh and New Delhi remain strained over India’s decision to grant asylum to Hasina.

“Warmest felicitations to Tarique Rahman on having been sworn in as the Prime Minister of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh,” Pakistan’s Sharif said on X Tuesday evening.

“I look forward to close and meaningful engagements with my brother, to further strengthen our bilateral cooperation across mutually beneficial areas and to deepen the historic ties between our two countries.”

Earlier in the day, Pakistani Planning Miniter Ahsan Iqbal called on Rahman after his oath-taking ceremony in Dhaka and conveyed warm congratulations on behalf of the government and people of Pakistan on his election, according to the Pakistani information ministry.

“He extended best wishes for the peace, progress and prosperity of Bangladesh under his leadership,” the ministry said. “Iqbal conveyed a formal invitation from the prime minister of Pakistan to Prime Minister Tarique Rahman to undertake an official visit to Pakistan at a mutually convenient date.”

Pakistan and Bangladesh were part of the same country until Bangladesh’s secession following a bloody civil war in 1971. However, Islamabad and Dhaka have lately been looking to strengthen institutional linkages to broaden their cooperation, following a reset of ties.