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Afghanistan Earthquake: Commandos Airdropped To Rescue Survivors

A powerful magnitude 6 quake struck Kunar and Nangarhar on Sunday, causing massive destruction, followed by a 5.5 tremor on Tuesday that disrupted rescues and blocked vital roads.
Afghan men walk on the rubble of a damaged house following a deadly magnitude-6 earthquake that struck Afghanistan on Sunday, in Mazar Dara, Kunar province, Afghanistan, September 2, 2025. REUTERS/Sayed Hassib

Afghanistan on Wednesday deployed commandos through airdrops to rescue survivors trapped beneath the rubble of homes in mountainous eastern regions devastated by earthquakes this week that have already claimed 1,400 lives, while simultaneously intensifying efforts to provide food, shelter, and medical assistance.

The first earthquake of magnitude 6, one of Afghanistan’s worst in recent years, unleashed widespread damage and destruction when it struck the provinces of Kunar and Nangarhar around midnight on Sunday at a shallow depth of 10 km (6 miles).

A second quake of magnitude 5.5 on Tuesday caused panic and interrupted rescue efforts as it sent rocks sliding down mountains and cut off roads to villages in remote areas.

Dozens of commando forces were being airdropped at sites where helicopters cannot land, to help carry the injured to safer ground, said Ehsanullah Ehsan, the head of disaster management in Kunar.

“A camp has been set up where service and relief committees are coordinating supplies and emergency aid,” he said. Two centres were also overseeing the transfer of the injured, the burial of the dead and the rescue of survivors, he added.

Helicopters In Rescue Ops

Earlier, rescuers had used helicopters to ferry the wounded to the hospital as they battled with mountainous terrain and harsh weather to reach quake-hit villages along the border with Pakistan, where the tremors flattened mudbrick homes.

The toll stands at 1,411 deaths, 3,124 injuries and more than 5,400 destroyed homes, the Taliban administration said, as the United Nations has warned it could rise, with victims trapped under rubble.

A Reuters journalist, who arrived in the area before Tuesday’s tremors, saw that every home had been damaged or destroyed, while people dug through rubble in the desperate search for those still trapped.

The second earthquake levelled homes that were only partially damaged by the first, residents said.

Resources for rescue and relief work are tight resources in the impoverished nation of 42 million people, which has received limited global help after the tragedy.

Fragile Homes Intensify Devastation

The impact was worsened by flimsy or poorly-built homes made of dry masonry, stone and timber, giving little protection from earthquakes, in ground left unstable by days of heavy rain, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

The agency, which is pulling together the global disaster effort, called for emergency shelter, food assistance and sanitation facilities, along with drinking water, critical medical supplies and other items.

The humanitarian response needed to scale up urgently, said an official of the international group Médecins Sans Frontières that distributed trauma kits at two hospitals in the affected areas.

“We saw many patients treated in the corridors and health workers in need of supplies,” said Dr Fazal Hadi, its deputy medical coordinator in Afghanistan, adding that the hospitals had been working at full capacity even before the quake.

Afghanistan is prone to deadly earthquakes, particularly in the Hindu Kush mountain range, where the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates meet.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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