Another
earthquake has hit western Afghanistan, just days after two large quakes in the
same region killed more than 1,000 people.
The new 6.3
magnitude quake struck at around 05:10 local time (00:40 GMT) on Wednesday,
28km (17 miles) north of Herat, killing at least one person.
More than 100
were injured and taken to hospital, health officials said.
Unicef said more
than 90% of those who died in this week's earthquakes in Afghanistan were women
and children.
The wider impact
of the latest quake is not yet clear, but many people were sleeping in the open
after their homes were destroyed on Saturday.
The governor of
Herat province said there had been significant damage. Many phone and power
lines are down. Aid agencies have said there is also a shortage of blankets,
food and other supplies.
An eyewitness in
central Herat, where some houses still stand, said she woke up screaming and
ran out of her home.
"I was in
the deepest sleep because I hadn't slept in the days before," she told the
BBC.
"I have
never felt so close to death," she said, adding that she ran barefoot to
the outskirts of the city, where many have been sleeping in tents since the
first quake.
Images from the
villages show entire houses, which were too fragile to withstand the tremors,
reduced to rubble.
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Afghanistan is frequently hit by earthquakes, especially in the Hindu Kush mountain range, as it lies near the junction of the Eurasian and Indian tectonic plates.
By Derek Cai & Mahfouz Zubaide || BBC
News
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