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Wednesday 03 September, 2025
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The earth shakes again in Afghanistan, already mourning one of its worst earthquakes

Auteur: AFP

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La terre tremble à nouveau en Afghanistan, déjà endeuillé par l'un de ses pires séismes

A new earthquake, measuring 5.2 on the Richter scale, struck eastern Afghanistan on Tuesday, still paralyzed after an earthquake on Sunday evening that left more than 1,400 dead and more than 3,100 injured.

The epicenter of this new earthquake is located just a few kilometers from the one that plunged thousands of families into horror around midnight on Sunday, with one of the highest human tolls in recent decades in the country, one of the poorest in the world.

No casualties or new damage have been reported so far, and Ehsanullah Ehsan, head of the Disaster Management Authority in Kunar, the worst-hit province on Sunday, said such "aftershocks are normal."

After the first earthquake, almost all the victims (1,411 dead, 3,124 injured) were recorded in Kounar where, as elsewhere, rescuers continue to search the rubble, while medical workers work to comfort those who have now lost everything.

Rahmatullah Khaksar, director of the emergency room at a hospital in Jalalabad, the capital of Nangarhar province, said he had received 600 injured people since Sunday evening.

"Most of the patients are being treated in trauma care, with injuries to the head, back, abdomen, and legs," he says. "For those without loved ones, we have made part of the hospital available for them to stay until they are reunited with their families."

In Geneva, Indrika Ratwatte, the UN's humanitarian coordinator in Afghanistan, warned that "potentially, the number of people affected could reach almost hundreds of thousands" in a country where, after four decades of war, 85% of the population already lives on less than a dollar a day, according to the UN.

- "Duty to help" -

According to Ehsanullah Ehsan, in Kounar, "the search has not stopped" and this "thanks to the mobilization of our employees and residents from the surrounding districts."

"The priority is to help the injured, then we will distribute tents and hot meals to the homeless," he told AFP, as relief efforts are still struggling to reach some villages cut off by landslides.

In Kounar province, Oubadullah Stouman rushed to the town of Wadir from his village on the border with Pakistan, further east, to get news of his relatives.

"People here are poor, it's our duty to help them," the 26-year-old Afghan told AFP. He himself was abruptly woken by the earthquake, but his village was not affected.

In Wadir, however, "there are only stones left, I don't even know how to describe it, it's very, very hard to see," he says, his throat tight.

- International aid -

Military helicopters continue their ballet towards the disaster areas, delivering aid and evacuating the wounded.

The epicenter of the two earthquakes was located about thirty kilometers from Jalalabad, at a depth of about ten kilometers, which explains the heavy toll and the extent of the damage.

Afghanistan, whose Taliban authorities are recognized only by Moscow, is suffering from recent cuts in international humanitarian aid, led by the United States.

In response to the disaster in Kounar, UN agencies have all launched appeals for donations and have already released $5 million from the UN's global emergency response fund.

London has announced £1 million to help support affected families, while the European Union will send 130 tonnes of aid this week.

Afghanistan is frequently hit by earthquakes, particularly in the Hindu Kush mountain range, near the junction of the Eurasian and Indian tectonic plates.

Since 1900, the northeast of the country has experienced 12 earthquakes with a magnitude greater than 7, according to Brian Baptie, a seismologist with the British Geological Survey.

After returning to power in 2021, the Taliban faced the deadliest earthquake in 25 years: in 2023, in the Herat region, at the other end of Afghanistan, on the border with Iran, more than 1,500 people were killed and more than 63,000 homes destroyed.

Auteur: AFP

Commentaires (3)

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    Défenseur il y a 12 heures

    Ooooh ! C'est dure avec ces phénomènes naturels.

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    Lecon de vie : Humanisme il y a 10 heures

    Il faut prôner l'humanisme, pour les aides viennent de pays de khoufar comme on le dit et qu'on maudit chaque jour.
    S'il y avait pas de religion et qu'on se limite à croire en Dieu le monde sera merveilleux.
    RIP aux victimes

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    Papi il y a 8 heures

    Pas de mécréance ici. Désolé

  • image
    @leçon de vie il y a 8 heures

    Absolument. Des gens jubilé ici sur seneweb lors des incendies à Los Angeles. Comme quoi, la religion est l'opium du peuple.

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    1000 milliards il y a 6 heures

    Que fait le Sénégal ? Nos frères musulmans ont besoin de nous.

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