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Women, children are two thirds of casualties in Afghan temblor that killed over 2000

FP Staff October 9, 2023, 17:59:54 IST

“The majority of those who are injured and killed are women and children who were inside the houses at the time of the earthquake, which occurred around 11 in the morning, when men were out of them,” WHO’s Dr. Alaa AbouZeid told

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Women, children are two thirds of casualties in Afghan temblor that killed over 2000

World Health Organization’s emergency response director in Afghanistan has said that women and children make up two-thirds of the recent earthquake victims who were hospitalized with serious injuries. The Taliban government reported that the quakes on Saturday, which were among the deadliest in the globe this year after those in Turkey and Syria in which an estimated 50,000 people died, left at least 2,400 people dead and more than 2,000 injured. “The majority of those who are injured and killed are women and children who were inside the houses at the time of the earthquake, which occurred around 11 in the morning, when men were out of them,” WHO’s Dr. Alaa AbouZeid told Reuters in a video interview. “Two-thirds of those with severe injuries who are admitted in the hospital I have seen yesterday are children and women,” he said, referring to his time in Herat following the quake. He also warned that financing the humanitarian operations remained critical, with global attention and funding shifting away from Afghanistan. That could be attributed to competing or emerging crises around the world, such in the Middle East and Ukraine, and amid concerns over Taliban restrictions on women, diplomats and aid officials say. AbouZeid said it was “devastating” to see the number of children in hospital in critical condition. “I have seen a child like 3-4 months old with head trauma, due to the earthquake,” he said. Head trauma can cause long-lasting debilitating effects or disabilities, AbouZeid said. The WHO’s response teams were taking the matter seriously, given the impact of such injuries on the victim and their families who would need to support them in the long run, he said. While the response teams saved many lives, hospitals need to be better equipped to deal with further casualties and similar situations in future, he said. Afghanistan’s healthcare system, largely reliant on foreign aid, has faced crippling cuts in the two years since the Taliban took over and much international assistance, forming the backbone of the economy, was halted. The U.N.’s humanitarian office has announced $5 million worth of assistance for the quake response, but immediate material support has come from a limited few countries. “The news diverted to what’s going on in the Middle East over the past two days and there was very little attention” towards the existing crisis in Afghanistan, he said. (With inputs from agencies)

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