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Hundreds feared dead, injured as magnitude 6 quake hits Afghanistan

Hundreds feared dead, injured as magnitude 6 quake hits Afghanistan
A general view shows residential buildings in the city of Kabul on January 11, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 33 min 31 sec ago

Hundreds feared dead, injured as magnitude 6 quake hits Afghanistan

Hundreds feared dead, injured as magnitude 6 quake hits Afghanistan
  • Quake struck Afghanistan’s northeastern Kunar province on Sunday night, with jolts felt in northwestern Pakistan as well
  • Hundreds of injured were taken to hospital, says Najibullah Hanif, Afghan information official, with figures likely to rise

KABUL: Hundreds were feared dead and injured in an earthquake of magnitude 6 that struck Afghanistan’s rugged northeastern province of Kunar, authorities said on Monday, as rescuers combed the rubble of homes in a hunt for survivors.

Early reports showed 30 dead in a single village, the health ministry said, but added that accurate casualty figures had yet to be gathered in an area of scattered hamlets with a long history of earthquakes and flooding.

“The number of casualties and injuries is high, but since the area is difficult to access, our teams are still on site,” health ministry spokesperson Sharafat Zaman said in a statement.

Hundreds of injured were taken to hospital, said Najibullah Hanif, the provincial information head, with figures likely to rise as reports arrived from remote areas with few roads.

Rescuers were working in several districts of the mountainous province where the midnight quake hit at a depth of 10 km (6 miles), to level homes of mud and stone on the border with Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa region, officials said.

Afghanistan is prone to deadly earthquakes, particularly in the Hindu Kush mountain range, where the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates meet.

A series of earthquakes in its west killed more than 1,000 people last year, underscoring the vulnerability of one of the world’s poorest countries to natural disasters.


A 6.0 magnitude earthquake shakes eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border

A 6.0 magnitude earthquake shakes eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border
Updated 8 min 11 sec ago

A 6.0 magnitude earthquake shakes eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border

A 6.0 magnitude earthquake shakes eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border
  • The quake at 11:47 p.m. was centered 27 kilometers east-northeast of the city of Jalalabad in Nangarhar province

KABUL: A magnitude 6.0 earthquake shook eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border late Sunday, causing some injuries. Information on the scale of damage was not immediately available.
The quake at 11:47 p.m. was centered 27 kilometers east-northeast of the city of Jalalabad in Nangarhar province, the US Geological Survey said. It was just 8 kilometers deep. Shallower quakes tend to cause more damage.
Naqibullah Rahimi, a spokesman for the Nangarhar Public Health Department, said 15 people were injured and taken to the hospital for treatment.
Jalalabad is a bustling trade city due to its proximity with neighboring Pakistan and a key border crossing between the countries. Although it has a population of about 300,000 according to the municipality, it’s metropolitan area is thought to be far larger. Most of its buildings are low-rise constructions, mostly of concrete and brick, and its outlying areas include homes built of mud bricks and wood. Many are of poor construction.
Jalalabad also has considerable agriculture and farming, including citrus fruit and rice, with the Kabul River flowing through the city.
A magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck Afghanistan on Oct. 7, 2023, followed by strong aftershocks. The Taliban government estimated that at least 4,000 people perished.
The UN gave a far lower death toll of about 1,500. It was the deadliest natural disaster to strike Afghanistan in recent memory.


North Korean leader inspects new missile factory ahead of visit to China

North Korean leader inspects new missile factory ahead of visit to China
Updated 19 min ago

North Korean leader inspects new missile factory ahead of visit to China

North Korean leader inspects new missile factory ahead of visit to China
  • Location of the factory was not disclosed, but it may be in Jagang province, a hub of the country’s munitions industry that borders China

SEOUL: North Korea said Monday leader Kim Jong Un inspected a new weapons factory that’s key to his plan to accelerate mass production of missiles in a weekend visit before he departs for a major military parade in China.
North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency did not disclose the location of the factory Kim visited Sunday, but it may be in Jagang province, a hub of the country’s munitions industry that borders China.
Both China and North Korea confirmed last week that Kim will make his first visit to China in six years to attend a military parade in Beijing on Wednesday, which marks the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II and China’s resistance against Japanese wartime aggression.
The 26 foreign leaders invited by Chinese President Xi Jinping also include Russia’s Vladimir Putin, who has received major wartime support from Kim in his invasion of Ukraine, making the Beijing event a show of three-way alignment against US efforts to strengthen security cooperation with South Korea and Japan.
South Korean media speculated Kim could depart for China by train sometime Monday, pointing to heightened security measures at the Chinese border town of Dandong, where rail traffic was reportedly halted and hotels stopped receiving foreign guests.
KCNA said the factory had assembly lines to speed missile production and reported that Kim praised scientists and workers and ratified plans for improvement.
South Korean officials say Kim has pushed to accelerate munitions production as he supplies Russia with large quantities of military equipment, including artillery and ballistic missiles. Kim has also sent thousands of troops since last fall to fight alongside Russian forces against Ukraine, as he prioritizes Moscow as part of a foreign policy aimed at expanding ties with nations confronting the United States.
Since aligning with Russia, North Korea has become more vocal in international affairs beyond the Korean Peninsula, issuing diplomatic statements on conflicts in the Middle East and in the Taiwan Strait, while portraying itself as a part of a united front against Washington. Some experts say Kim’s presence at the multilateral event in Beijing is part of efforts to develop partnerships with other nations close to China and Russia.
China remains North Korea’s largest trade partner and economic lifeline, and Kim’s attendance at the Beijing military parade is also seen as an attempt to showcase ties with a major ally and boost leverage ahead of a possible resumption of negotiations with Washington.
President Donald Trump and new liberal South Korean President Lee Jae Myung have repeatedly expressed their hopes to restart talks with North Korea, but the North has publicly dismissed their outreach. On Monday, South Korea said it has suspended a military-run radio broadcast into North Korea as part of steps to ease tensions. Lee’s government has already halted several other radio broadcasts containing South Korean and world news and removed front-line loudspeakers that used to blare K-pop songs, foreign news and propaganda messages across the border.
North Korea has been shunning talks with the US and South Korea since Kim’s earlier round of diplomacy with Trump collapsed in 2019 after Trump rejected Kim’s demands for major sanctions relief in exchange for partial steps toward denuclearization.


Xi slams ‘bullying’ in speech to regional leaders at summit

Xi slams ‘bullying’ in speech to regional leaders at summit
Updated 18 min 26 sec ago

Xi slams ‘bullying’ in speech to regional leaders at summit

Xi slams ‘bullying’ in speech to regional leaders at summit
  • The SCO summit, which also involves 16 more countries as observers or “dialogue partners,” kicked off on Sunday, days before a massive military parade in the capital Beijing to mark 80 years since the end of World War II
  • China and Russia have sometimes promoted the SCO as an alternative to organizations like NATO

TIANJIN: China’s President Xi Jinping blasted “bullying behavior” in the world order as he gathered Eurasian leaders Monday for a showpiece summit aimed at putting Beijing front and center of regional relations.
The Shanghai Cooperation Organization, comprising China, India, Russia, Pakistan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Belarus, is touted as a non-Western style of collaboration and seeks to be an alternative to traditional alliances.
Xi told the SCO leaders, including Russian and Belarusian presidents Vladimir Putin and Alexander Lukashenko, that the global international situation was becoming more “chaotic and intertwined.”
The Chinese leader also slammed “bullying behavior” from certain countries — a veiled reference to the United States.
“The security and development tasks facing member states have become even more challenging,” he added in his address to all the gathered dignitaries in the northern port city of Tianjin.
“Looking to the future, with the world undergoing turbulence and transformation, we must continue to follow the Shanghai spirit... and better perform the functions of the organization,” Xi said.
Leaders from the ten SCO countries including Putin, Lukashenko and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived earlier on a red carpet and posed for a group photo.
Xi, Putin and Modi were seen chatting on live footage, the three leaders flanked by their official translators.
The SCO summit, which also involves 16 more countries as observers or “dialogue partners,” kicked off on Sunday, days before a massive military parade in the capital Beijing to mark 80 years since the end of World War II.


Putin touched down in Tianjin on Sunday with an entourage of senior politicians and business representatives.
Xi held a flurry of back-to-back bilateral meetings with leaders including Lukashenko — one of Putin’s staunch allies — and Modi who is on his first visit to China since 2018.
Modi told Xi that India was committed to taking “forward our ties on the basis of mutual trust, dignity and sensitivity.”
The two most populous nations are intense rivals competing for influence across South Asia and fought a deadly border clash in 2020.
A thaw began last October, when Modi met with Xi for the first time in five years at a summit in Russia.
Their rapprochement deepened as US President Donald Trump pressured both Asian economic giants with trade tariffs.


China and Russia have sometimes promoted the SCO as an alternative to organizations like NATO. This year’s summit is the first since Trump returned to the White House.
Official posters promoting the SCO lined Tianjin’s streets, displaying words such as “mutual benefit” and “equality” written in Chinese and Russian.
More than 20 leaders including Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan are attending the bloc’s largest meeting since its founding in 2001.
Putin is expected to hold talks on Monday with Erdogan and Pezeshkian about the Ukraine conflict and Tehran’s nuclear program respectively.
Many of the assembled dignitaries will be in Beijing on Wednesday to witness the military parade, which will also be attended by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.


Indonesian groups call off protests on Monday, citing heightened security

Indonesian groups call off protests on Monday, citing heightened security
Updated 24 min 50 sec ago

Indonesian groups call off protests on Monday, citing heightened security

Indonesian groups call off protests on Monday, citing heightened security
  • Planned protests at the parliament delayed to avoid any crackdown by authorities
  • Political parties had agreed to cut lawmakers’ benefits, in an attempt to calm the protests

JAKARTA: Indonesian students and civil society groups called off protests in Jakarta on Monday after a week of escalating anger over lawmakers’ pay and the police response, citing fears of heightened security measures after deadly riots across the country on the weekend. The protests began a week ago, and have spread nationwide, escalating in size and intensity after a police vehicle hit and killed a motorcycle taxi driver on Thursday night. Eight people have died in the protests, chief economic minister Airlangga Hartarto said on Monday. On Sunday, President Prabowo Subianto said political parties had agreed to cut lawmakers’ benefits, in an attempt to calm the protests, and also ordered the military and police to act against rioters and looters after homes of political party members and state buildings were ransacked or set ablaze.
The Alliance of Indonesian Women, a coalition of women-led civil society groups, said it had delayed planned protests at the parliament to avoid any crackdown by authorities.
“The delay is done to avoid increased violent escalation by authorities ... the delay takes place until the situations calm down,” the group said in an Instagram post on Sunday.
Student groups also delayed a protest on Monday, with one umbrella group saying the decision was “due to very impossible conditions.” Student groups in the West Java town of Purwakarta and the city of Yogyakarta planned demonstrations on Monday, they said on their respective Instagram accounts, although Reuters could not immediately confirm whether they will take place. Social media posts from some groups warned of fake protest calls, and urged people to be cautious. Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati confirmed in an Instagram post that she was a victim of the looters. She called on people not to loot, and apologized for the government’s shortcomings.
The protests and violence have unsettled financial markets, with the stock market falling more than three percent in opening trades on Monday.
Airlangga said the economy was fundamentally solid and would get a boost from a planned incentive package.


German leader says peace cannot come at Ukraine’s expense

German leader says peace cannot come at Ukraine’s expense
Updated 01 September 2025

German leader says peace cannot come at Ukraine’s expense

German leader says peace cannot come at Ukraine’s expense
  • Asked whether a ceasefire might be possible this year, said he hasn’t lost hope but “harbors no illusions”
  • He emphasized that supporting Ukraine to defend itself against Russia was an “absolute priority”

 

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Sunday that the war in Ukraine could still last for a long time and ending it quickly at the country’s expense was not an option.
In an interview with German public broadcaster ZDF, Merz, when asked whether a ceasefire might be possible this year, said he hasn’t lost hope but “harbors no illusions,” and emphasized that supporting the country to defend itself against Russia was an “absolute priority.”
“We are trying to end it as quickly as possible. But certainly not at the price of Ukraine’s capitulation. You could end the war tomorrow if Ukraine surrendered and lost its independence,” Merz said.
“Then the next country would be at risk the day after tomorrow. And the day after that, it would be us. That is not an option,” the chancellor said.
Germany is a key backer of Ukraine and has delivered or pledged military support worth around 40 billion euros ($47 billion) since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.