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A strong earthquake struck villages in southwestern Pakistan before dawn today, killing at least 100 people, injuring scores more and destroying hundreds of homes, officials said.
The death toll was expected to rise as reports arrived from remote areas of Baluchistan province, an impoverished area bordering Afghanistan.
"It will be much more," Sohail ur Rahman, a top civilian official in one of the affected districts, told Dawn News television.
Zamaruk Khan, the minister for revenue and rehabilitation, said "more than 100" people have been found dead so far and the government is readying food, shelter and medical care for survivors.
The quake struck two hours before dawn and had a preliminary magnitude of 6.4, the US Geological Survey reported. It was a shallow 10 miles below the surface and was centered about 400 miles southwest of the capital, Islamabad.
The worst-hit area appeared to be Ziarat, where hundreds of mostly mud and timber houses were destroyed in five villages, said the mayor, Dilawar Kakar. Some were buried in landslides triggered by the quake, he said.
"Rescue work is being carried out by the villagers themselves, but a larger operation is needed here," Kakar said. The army said it was rushing medical teams on helicopters to the affected villages.
Pakistan is prone to violent seismic upheavals. Today's quake was the deadliest since a magnitude-7.6 quake devastated Kashmir and northern Pakistan in October 2005, killing about 80,000 people and leaving hundreds of thousands homeless.
Baluchistan is home to a long-running separatist movement, but is not considered a major battle ground in the fight against Taliban insurgents that plague other border regions. |