Asia | Rubble of a country

Afghanistan’s terrible earthquakes

Over 2,000 have died in the country’s latest calamity

An Afghan boy mourns next to the grave of his little brother, who was killed by an earthquake.
From bad to excruciatingly awfulImage: AP
|ZINDA JAN

Afghans must think their country cursed. In the past two years they have seen the Taliban return to power, a huge cutback in Western aid that has pitched most of the population into poverty—and a series of horrific natural disasters. In recent days powerful earthquakes have devastated over a dozen villages near the western city of Herat, close to the border with Iran. Over 2,000 people are reported to have been killed and many more injured or made destitute.

The epicentre of the earthquakes, which included two of magnitude 6.3 on October 7th and another on the 11th, was the district of Zinda Jan, around 40km north of Herat. Thirteen villages in the district were largely obliterated, their mud-brick buildings turned to heaps of suffocating earth. In the village of Nayeb Rafi on October 9th a crowd of volunteers could be seen helping survivors dig out their living and dead relatives. It was a terrible scene.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Rubble of a country”

Israel’s agony and its retribution

From the October 14th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Asia

Lai Ching-te aims to strengthen Taiwan but maintain the status quo

The new president won’t find it easy

The murder that aroused a nation

Despite a recent conviction, a culture of impunity persists among the well-connected


Taiwan, the world’s chipmaker, faces an energy crunch

The island is already plagued by blackouts