Magnitude 6.3 earthquake strikes Afghanistan days after tremors killed over 2,000
With a magnitude of 6.3, Saturday's earthquake was among the worst in the globe this year, surpassing the 50,000 fatalities from the earthquakes in turkey and Syria. The afghanistan National Disaster Management Authority (ANDMA) acknowledged on tuesday that more than 4,000 people have died as a result of Saturday's earthquakes. Mullah Saiq is the spokesperson for the organisation. Furthermore, he added that around 2,000 dwellings in roughly 20 communities had entirely fallen.
Concurrently, the United Nations Relief office declared that $5 million would be provided for the earthquake response. In the two years after the Taliban gained power and most foreign help was suspended, Afghanistan's healthcare system, which depends heavily on outside funding, has seen devastating losses. As the temperatures drop, survivors are in desperate need of shelter in addition to food and medical assistance, according to the chief of the World health Organization's emergency response.