Afghanistan's earthquake in News Onllne & World News

Heartbreak & Shock at Afghan Quake Hospital

News Online World News

By Emmanuel Peuchot & Abdullah Hasart

Bibi Hawa’s face is distorted by tears as she tries to grasp her predicament from a hospital bed in Sharan, capital of Afghanistan’s Paktika province. News Online

At least a dozen members of her family were among over 1,000 people killed by a devastating earthquake that struck the region early Wednesday, and she fears she has been left all alone.

“Where will I go, where will I go?” the 55-year-old asks repeatedly.

As a nurse tries to calm her down, talking to her gently and caressing her forehead, Bibi sighs: “My heart is weak.”

The 5.9-magnitude quake struck hardest in the rugged and impoverished east, where people already led hand-to-mouth lives made worse since the Taliban takeover in August.

The disaster poses a huge challenge for the hardline Islamists, who have largely isolated the country as a result of their hardline policies.

The United Nations in an initial estimate said over 2,000 homes were destroyed in the region, where the average family often has up to 20 members.

In the room where Bibi is being treated a dozen other women lie on beds — many asleep, some burrowed beneath blankets, others hooked up to vital fluids.

Afghanistan's earthquake in News Onllne & World News
Afghan villagers collects belongings from under the rubble of a home that was destroyed in an earthquake in the Spera District of the southwestern part of Khost Province, Afghanistan, Wednesday, June 22, 2022. A powerful earthquake struck a rugged, mountainous region of eastern Afghanistan early Wednesday, killing at least 1,000 people and injuring 1,500 more in one of the country’s deadliest quakes in decades, the state-run news agency reported. (AP Photo)

Shahmira is unhurt, but her one-year-old grandson lies in her lap, a large dressing covering his temple.

On the next bed her daughter-in-law is sleeping off her injuries, while a son is being treated in a different ward.

“We were sleeping when we heard a loud noise,” she tells AFP of the quake.

News Online World News

“I screamed… I thought my family was buried under the rubble and that I was the only one” still alive.

  • Cries everywhere –

In an adjacent ward, a dozen men are also recovering on beds.

One father holds his son on his lap — the boy wearing mustard-coloured pants with little black hearts, one leg in a plaster cast.

Nearby another child lies under a blue blanket. His left arm is also in a cast, while on his forehead a white bandage bears the word “emergency” written in black marker.

“It was a horrible situation,” recalls Arup Khan, 22, talking of the moments after the quake.

“There were cries everywhere. The children and my family were under the mud.”

Mohammad Yahya Wiar, director of Sharan Hospital, says they have been doing their best to treat everyone.

When the injured arrived, they “were crying, and we were crying too”, he tells AFP.

“Our country is poor and lacks resources. This is a humanitarian crisis. It is like a tsunami.”

But locals are rallying to help. In front of the hospital, a hundred men are waiting patiently.

“They have come to give blood — about 300 have already given it since this morning,” explains a Taliban fighter.

abh-epe/fox/mlm

© Agence France-Presse. All rights are reserved.

News Online World News

Commentary & News Online
APS Radio News