- By RFE/RL
International relief organizations are scrambling to provide aid to victims in western Afghanistan following a series of powerful earthquakes that left widespread destruction in their wake. More than 2,000 people have reportedly been killed in the country’s worst natural disaster in years.

Aid workers have reached some quake-stricken areas of western Afghanistan and started distributing emergency food supplies to those affected as rescue efforts continued after a series of powerful temblors killed at least 2,000 people.

Wahid Amani, a spokesman for the United Nations’ World Food Program (WFP) has told RFE/RL that emergency aid has been delivered to several hundred people in Herat Province so far.
“We are prepared to deliver emergency food aid to some 20,000 people” Amani said, adding that the UN food agency was ready to increase that number to 70,000 people.


In addition to the WFP, teams from the UN’s World Health Organization (WHO) have rushed to the areas of Herat worst affected by the quakes. WHO employees are already in the field helping with efforts to rescue and treat people still under the rubble, the organization’s Afghan branch told RFE/RL.

The WHO has put the number of those affected at more than 11,000 people.

The rugged area is difficult to reach, and local officials have given conflicting casualty tolls from the series of quakes in the area. On October 8, a member of the Taliban-led government said the updated death toll had surpassed 2,000.

Mullah Janan Sayeeq, a spokesman for the Taliban’s Ministry of Disasters, told a news conference that 2,440 people were dead, about 10,000 were injured, and that more than 2,000 houses had been damaged or destroyed. Afghanistan’s disaster agency said on October 8 that 2,053 people had been killed.
Neither estimate could be independently confirmed.


The epicenter of the first earthquake was some 40 kilometers northwest of Herat, which has some 700,000 people in the city and the surrounding area. It was followed by at least three major aftershocks.




The U.S. Geological Survey recorded the largest of the earthquakes at a magnitude of 6.3, with the latest aftershock coming about 30 kilometers northeast of the city of Zindah Jan, which has a population of about 70,000 people.

Disaster authority spokesperson Mohammad Abdullah Jan said four villages in the Zindah Jan district in Herat Province bore the brunt of the quake and aftershocks.