348 Pakistanis Killed in
Baluchistan September 25, 2013

A huge earthquake struck the
south of Pakistan killing at least 348 people on Wednesday,
toppling many mud-built homes. The quake struck with enough
force to create a new island off the coast.
Pakistan earthquake death toll nears 350
By
FRANCE 24 (text), September 26, 2013
The death toll from a powerful earthquake in
Pakistan rose to at least 348 on Wednesday after hundreds of
mud-built homes collapsed in a remote area near the Iranian border,
officials said.
The earthquake, which measured 7.8-magnitude according to the United
States Geological Survey, struck Pakistan’s thinly populated province of
Baluchistan on Tuesday and was felt across South Asia.
Baluchistan is Pakistan’s largest province but also the least
populated and most impoverished. In Awaran, the worst affected district
of the region, local officials said some 90% of homes had been destroyed
homes and communications had been cut.
“We have started to bury the dead,” Abdul Rasheed Gogazai, the deputy
commissioner of Awaran, told Reuters by telephone from the affected
area.
He said at least 373 people were injured.
Provincial government spokesman Jan Muhammad Buledi told AFP: "We are
trying to shift seriously injured people to Karachi through helicopters
and others to the neighbouring districts."
The army deployed helicopters and hundreds of soldiers to help deal
with the rescue effort in the huge, earthquake-prone province of deserts
and rugged mountains bordering Iran and Afghanistan.
Unstable area
Baluchistan is believed to have substantial gas and oil reserves, but
it is a flashpoint for growing violence against minority Shiite Muslims
and has suffered attacks blamed on Taliban militants.
It also suffers from an ongoing separatist insurgency which began in
2004 when Baloch rebels rose up to demand a greater share of profits
from the province's mineral resources. As a result, the
Baloch community says it suffers severe discrimination.
Many residents are believed to be involved in smuggling fuel from
Iran, while others harvest dates.
A Pakistani military official speaking on customary condition of
anonymity said security officials were fired on while escorting doctors
to Awaran but nobody was wounded.
The quake was felt as far as New Delhi, the Indian capital, some
1,200 kilometres (about 740 miles) away, but no damage or injuries were
immediately reported there.
The quake also jolted Pakistan’s largest city, Karachi, roughly 250
kilometers (155 miles) from the epicentre. People in the city’s tall
office buildings rushed into the streets, and Pakistani television
showed lights swaying as the earth shook.
The quake was so powerful that it caused a small island to emerge
from the sea just off the coastline in the Arabian Sea.
Witnesses reported seeing a small island appear off the coast of the
port of Gwadar after the quake, said the director general of the
Pakistan Meteorological Department, Arif Mahmood.
Gwadar Police Chief Pervez Umrani said people gathered on the beach
to see the land mass, which was about nine metres (30 feet) high and 100
metres (109 yards) long.
Pakistan's earthquake death toll may rise in inaccessible
areas: minister
Islamabad, Sept. 26, 2013 (Xinhua) --
Pakistan's Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan told the
parliament on Thursday that the death toll from the 7.7-magnitude
powerful earthquake could rise as some areas are still inaccessible due
to lack of roads.
The minister, in a policy statement on the earthquake that struck
parts of southwestern Balochistan province on Tuesday, informed the
National Assembly that 348 people are confirmed dead.
He said C-130 military cargo planes will start transporting relief
goods to the affected areas from Thursday.
He said the earthquake has affected a 500-kilometer area in
Balochistan and Awaran and Kech are the most affected areas.
The minister said 1,000 Army personnel are also involved in helping
the affected populations.
Chaudhry Nisar said the army-run National Logistic Cell has also been
mobilized to transport relief goods to the quake-hit areas.
He advised the political parties to avoid point scoring on this
national tragedy and instead demonstrate unity.
The federal ministers Abdul Qadir Baloch and Jam Kaml visited the
worst affected areas on Thursday where they were briefed over the rescue
and relief operations.
The ministers were informed that the Army has set up a medical camp
in Mashkil area and doctors and surgeons are treating the injured.
Reports said helicopter of the Chairman Major General, Saeed Aleem,
Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), escaped a
rocket fire when he was heading to Mashkil area in Balochistan.
A senior security official said most of the affected areas are highly
risky for relief workers as insurgents operate there.
Editor: Meng