Fears are growing over the victims of the earthquake that killed more than 1,150 people in Afghanistan this Wednesday, and citizens are warning of the dangers and hardships that citizens are suffering.
Despite the incoming first aid from the international community, hundreds of citizens were left homeless and without medical care.
“The Ministry of Health is short of medicines, we need medical care and other needs because this is a big disaster,” said an official quoted by the Guardian, while citizen Zaytullah Gurziwal warned that “there were no blankets.” , tents or sheds. But the problems don’t end there. “Our entire water supply system is destroyed. There is literally nothing to eat,” writes AFP.
The international community has already begun mobilizing to help Afghanistan, with United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres deploring the “deadly” natural disaster that has hit eastern Afghanistan.
Guterres said the UN is “fully mobilized” and that teams in Afghanistan are on the ground assessing “needs and providing initial support.”
“I express my deepest condolences to the families of the victims and wish a speedy recovery to the injured,” he added.
Several other organizations, including the World Health Organization, the local Red Crescent and the World Food Program, have begun sending mobile medical teams to Paktika and Khost provinces at a time when the population is also in need of assistance. food and non-food aid, and water, hygiene and sanitation assistance.
The European Union requested this Wednesday “international assistance” to Afghanistan, ensuring that it will help those who need it most.
The situation is so serious that the Taliban-led government has appealed to the international community for help and support to deal with the devastation caused by this natural disaster.
In a rare public speech, Taliban supreme leader Haibatullah Akhundzade called on the international community and humanitarian organizations to “help the Afghan people who have suffered from this great tragedy and spare no effort,” the British newspaper quoted.
At a time when the territory was already embroiled in an economic crisis, the extremist group also called on Western countries to lift the restrictions imposed after the withdrawal of the US military from Afghanistan, which brought the insurgent group to power.
However, the involvement of the Taliban could become an obstacle to the distribution of humanitarian aid, as countries such as Germany or Norway say they will not cooperate directly with the rebel group, but will only send aid through organizations such as the United Nations.
Complicating rescue efforts is the fact that the quake has affected areas already hit by heavy rains, landslides and mud, forcing townspeople to dig and search for survivors among the rubble.
In addition to those killed, at least 2,000 people and more than 118,000 children were affected by the earthquake, according to authorities.