Pakistan quake death toll rises to 356
Further complicating
relief efforts, two rockets were fired at -- and missed -- a military
helicopter on its way to the quake zone.
The number of people
injured has climbed to 619, said Jan Muhammad Buledi, a spokesman for
the government of Balochistan, the province where the quake hit.
Authorities estimate that 21,000 houses have been destroyed.
The 7.7-magnitude
earthquake took place Tuesday in a remote, sparsely populated area of
Balochistan. Rescue efforts are under way in the heavily hit districts
of Awaran and Kech.
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Images from the scene
have shown buildings reduced to rubble. More people are feared to be
trapped under the wreckage, authorities say, suggesting the death toll
could rise.
The remoteness of the affected area and damaged communications networks are hindering the rescue operation.
Officials say some areas remain inaccessible, preventing them from getting a full picture of the scale of the damage.
Meanwhile, thousands of
survivors in need of assistance after the quake are having to cope with
high temperatures, a lack of drinking water and little in the way of
shelter.
October is the hottest
month in Balochistan and the region is in a perpetual state of drought,
said Muhammad Hanif, the director of the National Weather Forecasting
Center. Temperatures in Awaran and Kech have reached 37 degrees Celsius
(99 degrees Fahrenheit).
Helicopter attacked
The Pakistani military has deployed more than 1,000 troops to help with rescue and relief efforts
The troops are entering a
difficult region. Militants fighting for a separate state in
Balochistan operate out of part of Awaran district, which has been the
site of bombings.
The potential threat was
underlined Thursday when two rockets were fired at an army helicopter
ferrying the chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority to
the earthquake zone, a military official said.
The rockets missed the
helicopter as it flew over the narrow Mashki Valley on its way to
Awaran, said Brig. Muhammad Abdur Raheem, an army spokesman in
Balochistan.
The helicopter was
carrying Maj. Gen. Muhammad Saeed Aleem, the National Disaster
Management Authority chairman, as well as staff officers and two members
of the local news media, Raheem said. All those who were aboard are
safe, he added.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the failed attack.
Pakistani officials have
said the quake was powerful enough to cause the appearance of a small
mud island a few kilometers off the country's coast in the Arabian Sea.
But some overseas scientists have questioned whether the island was the
direct result of the earthquake.
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