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Afghan rescuers still digging for buried victims amid hazy hope

Siah Ab, Afghanistan—Rescue workers scrabbled through rubble Tuesday for villagers buried in their homes by a series of earthquakes that killed more than 2,000 people in rural western Afghanistan, but hope of finding survivors was fading fast.

Volunteers have worked non-stop with spades and pickaxes in Herat province since Saturday’s deadly magnitude 6.3 quake struck — followed by a series of powerful aftershocks — but some were turning to digging graves instead.

Afghanistan is frequently hit by deadly earthquakes, but the weekend disaster is the worst to strike the impoverished country in more than 25 years.

Strong tremors were still shaking the area on Monday.

“There are families who don’t have anyone left alive,” said 50-year-old Ali Mohammad in Nayeb Rafi village, once home to 2,000 people.

“No one is left, not a woman nor a child… no one.”

In nearby Siah Ab, a mass funeral ceremony was held Monday for more than 300 victims collected from nearby communities.

White-shrouded bodies were unloaded from a fleet of vehicles and laid in ranks as a crowd of men solemnly crossed their arms in Islamic prayer.

“I thought I must have been dreaming; all the places were razed,” said 30-year-old Ismail, who goes by only one name.

“No one is left.”

The United Nations says “100 percent” of homes were destroyed in 11 villages of rural Zenda Jan, a hard-to-reach district just 30 kilometres (19 miles) northwest of Herat city, the provincial capital.

Disaster management ministry spokesman Mullah Janan Sayeq said late Monday that desperate villagers were still searching to “get their family out of debris.”

But reports from the field described “a very bad situation” he told a news conference in the capital.

Local and national officials gave conflicting counts of the number of dead and injured, but the disaster ministry said Sunday that 2,053 people had died.

“We can’t give exact numbers for dead and wounded as it is in flux,” Sayeq said.

More than 11,000 people had been affected from 1,655 families, the World Health Organization says.

Trucks packed with food and blankets have arrived in the area, with blue tents popping up among the ruins of villages.

As winter draws in, providing

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