-
Olympic champion boxer Khelif challenges gender test at CAS
-
Guyana votes amid oil boom, Venezuela tensions
-
UK, Japan, South Korea endure hottest summer on record
-
Villarreal snap up Lyon striker Mikautadze ahead of transfer deadline
-
New Italy coach Gattuso 'not afraid' before first matches in charge
-
European stocks steady after robust gains for Chinese equities
-
UK fintech Revolut valued at $75 bn: source to AFP
-
Olympic champion boxer Khelif challenges gender test at CAS: statement
-
Bangladesh crush Netherlands to clinch T20 series
-
'Partnership not pants': Motorsport boss candidate seeks culture change
-
Former British heavyweight boxer Joe Bugner dies aged 75
-
Venice heralds Hitchcock heroine Novak with lifetime achievement award
-
French Top 14 chief calls R360 rebel league an 'abomination'
-
'The Rock' finds new range in Venice debut 'The Smashing Machine'
-
Europe's Ryder Cup skipper Donald opts for continuity in captain's picks
-
Donnarumma set for move to Manchester City, Gattuso says
-
France striker Kolo Muani set for Tottenham loan move
-
Earthquake in Afghan village leaves no family untouched
-
'The Rock' looks to stretch his range in 'The Smashing Machine'
-
RFK Jr 'endangering' all Americans, health agency ex-chiefs warn
-
Isak poised for Liverpool switch on frantic Premier League deadline day
-
Bayern's Davies returns to training
-
Spain PM says planning for deadly wildfires 'clearly insufficient'
-
Mauritania's Tah takes over as Africa's 'super banker'
-
Indonesia capital on edge as army appears after deadly protests
-
Tunisian brutalist landmark faces wrecking ball, sparking outcry
-
EU chief's plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria
-
Fierce winds force Gaza aid flotilla back to Barcelona
-
European stocks climb after robust gains for Chinese equities
-
Bosnian truckers block deliveries in protest over EU rules
-
Leverkusen sack Erik Ten Hag after two league matches
-
Australia police charge man over Russian consulate car ramming
-
African players in Europe: Mbeumo hits first league goal for United
-
International media protest over journalist deaths in Gaza
-
Japan, South Korea endure hottest summer on record
-
Donnarumma set for move to Manchester City
-
Afghanistan earthquake kills more than 800
-
Ukraine says Russia linked to lawmaker's killing
-
Women's Cricket World Cup prize money to outstrip men: ICC
-
Japan, South Korea had hottest summer on record in 2025
-
Thousands protest in Indonesia as military deployed in capital
-
Alibaba soars but Europe, Asia stocks mixed
-
Chinese cluster now world's top innovation hotspot: UN
-
Morocco set to be first African qualifiers for 2026 World Cup
-
Afghanistan earthquake kills more than 600
-
Australian police say fugitive gunman is being helped
-
Malawi's fuel crisis hangs over upcoming elections
-
Minorities stand to lose in Trump's Texas vote map redo
-
Uzbek workers fill gap as Bulgarian population shrinks
-
What does North Korea's Kim want from rare China trip?
Afghanistan earthquake kills more than 800, flattens villages
A massive rescue operation was underway in Afghanistan on Monday, after a strong earthquake collapsed homes onto sleeping families in a remote, mountainous region, killing more than 800 people with the toll expected to rise, Taliban authorities said.
The 6.0-magnitude earthquake struck just before midnight, rattling buildings from Kabul to neighbouring Pakistan's capital Islamabad.
Casualties and destruction swept across at least five provinces and rescuers were still pulling people from destroyed homes and evacuating the injured by helicopter as evening approached.
"The search operation is still going on. Many people are stuck under the rubble of their roofs," the disaster management head in eastern Kunar province, Ehsanullah Ehsan, told AFP, warning the death toll could rise.
Around 800 people were killed and 2,500 injured in Kunar alone, near the epicentre, Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said.
Another 12 people were killed and 255 injured in neighbouring Nangarhar province, while 58 people were injured in Laghman province.
In Wadir village in Kunar's Nurgal district, dozens of residents of the surrounding area helped rescuers to pull people from the rubble of flattened homes, sometimes with their bare hands, AFP journalists saw.
Many injured were transported to hospitals in Jalalabad city in Nangarhar province, such as 22-year-old Zafar Khan Gojar, who was evacuated from Nurgal along with his brother whose leg was broken.
"The rooms and walls collapsed... killing some children and injuring others," he told AFP.
The earthquake epicentre was about 27 kilometres (17 miles) from Jalalabad, according to the USGS, which said it struck about eight kilometres below the Earth's surface.
- 'Fear and tension' -
Relatively shallow quakes can cause more damage, especially since the majority of Afghans live in low-rise, mud-brick homes vulnerable to collapse.
Some of the most severely impacted villages in Kunar "remain inaccessible due to road blockages", the UN migration agency warned in a statement to AFP.
Roads remained blocked nearly 20 hours after the earthquake, despite resident efforts to clear the way.
"There is a lot of fear and tension... Children and women were screaming. We had never experienced anything like this in our lives," a member of the agricultural department in Nurgal Ijaz Ulhaq Yaad told AFP.
He said that many living in quake-hit villages were among the more than four million Afghans who have returned to the country from Iran and Pakistan in recent years.
"They wanted to build their homes here."
Nangarhar and Kunar provinces border Pakistan, with the Torkham crossing the site of many waves of Afghan returnees deported or forced to leave, often with no work and nowhere to go.
UN chief Antonio Guterres added his condolences to those shared by the Taliban government and several nations.
"I stand in full solidarity with the people of Afghanistan after the devastating earthquake that hit the country earlier today," he said.
In a post shared by the Vatican, Pope Leo XIV said he was "deeply saddened by the significant loss of life caused by the earthquake in the area of eastern Afghanistan".
- Frequent quakes -
Afghanistan is frequently hit by earthquakes, especially in the Hindu Kush mountain range, near the junction of the Eurasia and India tectonic plates.
Since 1900, there have been 12 earthquakes with magnitudes greater than seven in northeast Afghanistan, according to Brian Baptie, a seismologist at the British Geological Survey.
"This scale of the seismic activity, the potential for multi-hazard events and the construction of structures in the region can combine to create significant loss of life in such events," he said.
In October 2023, western Herat province was devastated by a 6.3-magnitude earthquake, which killed more than 1,500 people and damaged or destroyed more than 63,000 homes.
A 5.9-magnitude quake struck the eastern province of Paktika in June 2022, killing more than 1,000 people and leaving tens of thousands homeless.
Ravaged by four decades of war, Afghanistan is already contending with a series of humanitarian crises.
Since the return of the Taliban in 2021, foreign aid to Afghanistan has been slashed, undermining the impoverished nation's already hamstrung ability to respond to disasters.
Around 85 percent of the Afghan population lives on less than one dollar a day, according to the UN Development Programme.
H.Nasr--SF-PST