Strong earthquake rattles northeast Afghanistan
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - A powerful earthquake jolted the remote Hindu Kush mountains along Afghanistan's northeast border with Pakistan early Tuesday as residents slept, officials said.
The quake was centered in Afghanistan's Badakhshan province, which borders Pakistan, Tajikistan and China, near the Wakhan corridor, a narrow strip of Afghan territory that juts off to the northeast of the country.
The temblor struck at 2:24 a.m. Tuesday (2124 GMT Monday)
The U.S. Geological Survey said it had a magnitude of 6.6. Pakistan's Seismological Center, based in the northwestern city of Peshawar, put the magnitude at 6.8.
A government spokesman in Kabul, where the quake rattled windows and sent some frightened residents scampering into the streets in their nightclothes, had no immediate information on any casualties or damage.
"The whole region is earthquake-prone,'' said presidential spokesman Jawed Ludin.
"Emergency response has been very challenging in the past because a lot of areas are difficult to access.''
In May 1998, an earthquake of magnitude 6.9 killed as many as 5,000 people in northern Afghanistan and neighboring Tajikistan.
Another quake killed up to 1,000 in northern Afghanistan in March 2002.
Mohammed Irfan, an official at Pakistan's Seismological Center, said Tuesday's quake lasted "nearly a minute.''
"It was of severe intensity,'' he said.
Amir Shahzad Warsi, an official at Pakistan's Meteorological Department in the capital, Islamabad, said the quake was "intense'' and there were fears it could cause serious damage.
It was felt as far east as Lahore, near Pakistan's border with India.
The Afghan area of Badakhshan is extremely remote and difficult to reach by road.
Assessing the damage could take time, sometimes even several days.
The quake's epicenter was 275 kilometers (175 miles) northeast of Kabul near the border with Pakistan, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
The area sees frequent seismic activity.
A pair of magnitude-5 earthquakes struck northwestern Pakistan on March 10 and February 22, but caused no injuries.
A magnitude 5.7 quake and nearly equally strong aftershock struck roughly the same region on Feb. 13, killing at least 24 people, triggering landslides and demolishing hundreds of homes. - AP
For the latest news from The AP Wire click here
- Father of girl who died Thursday surrenders to cops
- Aishwarya Rai arrives in KL and can't find bag for 2 hours
- 20 food items to be placed under price control during Ramadan
- Cabinet to mull Creative Industry Industry Policy by year end
- Conversion case: Indira Gandhi makes police report over child custody
News Poll
- Malaysians express their anger over rape incident
- Angry robber takes it out on baby
- Low’s interview captures world attention
- Girl in coma after fighting off would-be rapists
- Police hope for more witnesses to come forward as man remains unhelpful
- Get-rich-quick firm raided
- Facebook users slam alleged rapist
- Chua: Stop speculating on Ling’s case
- DPM: Charge against Ling proves the legal system is fair
- 5 women of Chinese nationality detained in anti-vice raid
- Low’s interview captures world attention
- Get-rich-quick firm raided
- Girl in coma after fighting off would-be rapists
- DPM: Charge against Ling proves the legal system is fair
- Malaysians express their anger over rape incident
- Asyraf wins Imam Muda title
- Angry robber takes it out on baby
- Aishwarya Rai in town today
- Facebook users slam alleged rapist
- RM1.32bil for 50,000 homes to be built by 2012
