MIRPUR (Azad Kashmir): A news cameraman films a damaged road after the earthquake on Tuesday. (Right) An aerial view of a collapsed bridge in Jatlan area.—AFP/INP
MUZAFFARABAD/ISLAMABAD: A 5.8-magnitude earthquake struck southern Mirpur district of Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) on Tuesday, leaving at least 25 persons, including women and children, dead and around 400 others injured, many of them seriously, officials said.
Occurring at about 4pm, the shallow quake hit 22.3 kilometres north of Jhelum, along the boundary separating the agricultural heartland of Punjab and AJK, according to the US Geological Survey. A soldier is among the dead.
“The quake was 10km deep and felt in most of Punjab and some parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. However, the worst hit was Mirpur district of Azad Kashmir,” chief meteorologist Mohammad Riaz was quoted by TV channels as saying.
National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) Chairman Lt Gen Mohammad Afzal said the situation was under control and rescue operation was under way.
Mohammad Tayyab, Mirpur Divisional Commissioner, told Dawn that since the epicentre of the earthquake was within the AJK territory, on the left bank of the River Jhelum, it had played havoc between Jatlan and Khari Sharif, damaging hundreds of houses, vehicles and other infrastructure, in addition to causing physical losses.
He said as many as 12 persons had died either on way to or at the Divisional Headquarters Hospital, Mirpur, while around 13 had lost their lives in different villages between Jatlan and Khari Sharif within the jurisdiction of Afzalpur and Mangla police stations. Of the injured persons, 150 were retained at the DHQ Hospital, five shifted to CMH Mangla and as many to CMH Rawalpindi. The rest had been sent home after necessary treatment, he said.
The cellular phone service and electricity supply in rural areas had been suspended due to which people were unable to contact their near and dear ones immediately.
In Mirpur city, people said they were caught off guard by the unexpected calamity.
“I was in my house when it started trembling [...] The ceiling developed cracks and the items on shelves started falling down,” said Waheed Hameed Butt, a resident of F-1 Sector in Mirpur.
“We rushed outside and were joined by almost everyone from the entire neighbourhood. Children were crying and elders were reciting kalima. I have never experienced such a harrowing earthquake in this area,” said the 40-year-old father of three.
In Mirpur University of Science and Technology (MUST), located along Chowk-i-Shaheedan, an eighth semester student from Gilgit-Baltistan, identified as Hameedullah, got so much panicked that he jumped from the second floor of building and was seriously injured. He died on way to hospital, Mr Butt said.
Chaudhry Mohammad Saeed, AJK Minister for Sports, Youth and Culture, who represents Mirpur city in the AJK legislature, told Dawn that a state of emergency had been declared in all public and private hospitals of the town.
Mr Tayyab said the quake had also caused breaches in Upper Jhelum canal at different points from where water had spilled over to adjacent areas. However, 95 per cent of the canal water was diverted to River Jhelum, he said.