Perilous Times
Over 60 feared dead, 400 hurt in Afghan avalanches
By RAHIM FAIEZ
The Associated Press
Tuesday, February 9, 2010; 1:33 PM
KABUL -- A series of avalanches engulfed a mountain pass in
Afghanistan, trapping hundreds of people in their buried cars and
killing as many as 64 people so far, authorities said Tuesday.
Rescuers brought in bulldozers, ambulances and helicopters in a massive
effort to reach victims stuck in the frigid snow along the
12,700-feet-high (3,800-meter) Salang Pass, which links the Afghan
capital Kabul with the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif.
Search-and-rescue teams recovered the bodies of 24 people but said they
feared 40 others remain trapped and may have also died, Interior
Minister Hanif Atmar said at a news conference in Kabul. About 2,500
people were rescued from their snowbound vehicles, including more than
400 injured.
"Twenty-four bodies have been recovered so far, but the fear is that
there could be up to 40 more still buried and unfortunately, they might
have died already," he said. "That's the best estimate we have at this
moment."
The avalanches struck Monday, burying vehicles along several miles
(kilometers) of road under heavy snow. Atmar said that the highway
tunnel had not been closed off earlier because there had been little
warning.
"It happened all of a sudden and it took us by surprise," he said.
Military helicopters were dropping food packages to people stuck on
snow-blocked roads, Interior Ministry spokesman Zemerai Bashary said.
Earlier, Afghan reports said some 300 cars and buses were trapped on
the mountain pass.
Afghan and coalition forces evacuated about 430 injured, with 180 taken
by coalition helicopters to Bagram Airbase for medical treatment, said
Defense Minister Gen. Abdul Rahim Wardak.
Atmar said authorities were unable to locate the parents of 24 children
who had been evacuated and were being treated for injuries at local
hospitals.
Some of the injured were taken to the Charikar Hospital in Parwan
province. One injured eyewitness, Abdul Shakor, told Associated Press
Television he saw more than 100 vehicles still trapped by snow.
"We cannot exactly say how many people have been killed. We opened (the
door of) one Toyota car; there were five dead bodies inside and we
brought them to the hospital with the help of police," he said.
Some 500 Afghan soldiers were mobilized to join about 400 police and
others in rescue efforts. The international coalition contributed four
Chinook helicopters, while the army sent two choppers, several
ambulances and several bulldozers, the Afghan National Army said.
Suhrab Ali Safari, acting public works minister, told The Associated
Press in a phone interview from Salang a that strong snowstorm
overnight triggered a major avalanche that covered about 2 miles (3.5
kilometers) of road.
"Unfortunately, it has blocked the road completely. We're working to
clear it from both sides, north and south," he said.
Safari said there had been a series of smaller avalanches in the area
in recent weeks.
"Everybody is trying to rescue the people who are stuck in the
avalanche. But while we're clearing one part of the road, the storm
covered another part of the road again. It's very difficult," he said.
In a statement, President Hamid Karzai ordered the ministries of public
works, defense and disaster control to "use all possible means to get
the roads unblocked and rescue those trapped and stranded in the heavy
snow."
He also expressed condolences to the families of the victims who were
killed or injured.