Pakistan quake toll reaches 515, insurgents hamper aid efforts

Survivors complain of lack of shelter as new tremor hits region, killing five

Ayoung woman  burns wooden sticks near the rubble of a mud house after it collapsed following an earthquake at Dhallbedi Peernder village in Awaran district, southwestern Pakistani province of Baluchistan. Photograph: Naseer Ahmed/Reuters
Ayoung woman burns wooden sticks near the rubble of a mud house after it collapsed following an earthquake at Dhallbedi Peernder village in Awaran district, southwestern Pakistani province of Baluchistan. Photograph: Naseer Ahmed/Reuters

The death toll from an earthquake in southwestern Pakistan has reached 515, with insurgent attacks threatening relief efforts and survivors complain of lack of shelter from the scorching sun.

Babar Yaqoob, the Chief Secretary of Baluchistan, gave the updated death toll as he toured the destroyed region of Awaran, where the 7.7 magnitude quake struck on Tuesday.

A 6.8 magnitude aftershock jolted the same region today, bringing down more buildings amid ongoing search and rescue efforts. At least five people were killed in today’s quake.

Bodies are still being discovered in houses whose mud walls and wooden roof beams had collapsed on Tuesday.

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“My daughter was killed when my house collapsed - I was also inside my house but manage to run out,” said 70-year-old Gul Jan. “We are sitting under the scorching sun and need shelter.”

In Labash village near Awaran, more than half of the 3,000 houses have collapsed and those still standing have wide cracks.

"Everywhere we go people are asking for tents," local politician Abdul Qadeer Baloch said.

The arid area is also a stronghold of separatist Baluch insurgents, who have twice shot at helicopters carrying military officials in charge of responding to the disaster.

On Thursday, two rockets narrowly missed the helicopter carrying the general in charge of the National Disaster Management Agency and shots were fired yesterday at two helicopters carrying aid, the military said.

"There is a law and order situation here and other hurdles but despite everything, we will get to every last person," said Lt Gen Nasir Janjua, the highest ranking military official in the province.

Aid must travel by pitted roads that cut through mountains held by the insurgents.

The rebels, who have killed many civilians and members of the security forces, are fighting for independence from Pakistan. They accuse the central government of stealing the province’s rich mineral deposits and the security forces of widespread human rights abuses.

Reuters