The epicenter was located 17 miles northeast of Jalalabad, impacting Nangarhar, Kunar, Laghman and Nuristan provinces. Tremors reached Pakistan’s border areas, indicating just how powerful this was in the earthquake-prone Hindu Kush mountains.
More than 5,400 homes have been destroyed or damaged in the region. Several villages in Kunar province were destroyed. In the immediate aftermath, frantic residents dug through rubble with their bare hands, desperately searching for family members trapped under collapsed homes.
Immediate rescue efforts underway: Roads blocked, access limited
Afghan authorities launched urgent response efforts, sending helicopters to airlift critically injured people to Jalalabad and Asadabad hospitals. Heavy machinery crews worked to clear blocked roads, but many remote communities remain cut off.
Twenty emergency assessment teams were sent to the worst-hit areas. Debris, landslides, and collapsed structures blocking key routes has made getting to survivors extremely difficult. “Many roads are blocked, forcing assessment teams to walk for four to five hours to reach survivors,” said Graham Davison, CARE Afghanistan Country Director. The assessment teams were forced to abandon their vehicles and navigate rough mountain terrain on foot to reach remote communities. Phone signals are poor, making coordination difficult.