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UN says Turkey likely best to send rescue teams to Afghanistan

UN says Turkey likely best to send rescue teams to Afghanistan
World
2 min read
The UN has said Turkey is "best positioned" to provide aid following a deadly earthquake in Afghanistan which has killed 1000 people so far
The death toll is expected to rise as information trickles in from remote mountain villages [Getty]

The United Nations does not have search and rescue capabilities in Afghanistan and Turkey is "best positioned" to provide it following a deadly earthquake in Afghanistan on Wednesday, a senior UN aid official said.

"We spoke about it with the embassy of Turkey here on the ground and they're waiting for the formal request," said deputy UN envoy in Afghanistan Ramiz Alakbarov. "We will be able to make such request only after the discussion with the de-facto authorities and based on what is the reality on the ground."

The death toll from an earthquake in Afghanistan hit 1,000, disaster management officials said, with more than 600 injured and the toll expected to grow as information trickles in from remote mountain villages.

Alakbarov - speaking from Kabul - said that while the Taliban had not yet formally requested help from international search and rescue teams, the United Nations had already sounded out countries in the region to see "if they would be willing and available to deploy such capacity."

"Our teams do not have specific equipment to take people from under the rubble. This has to rely mostly on the efforts of the de-facto authorities, which also has certain limitations in that respect," he said.

Alakbarov said it was unclear how well positioned the Taliban were to operate and deploy their to the mountainous areas hit by the earthquake.

The United Nations has shipped about 10 tonnes of essential medical supplies to the region and deployed 20 medical health teams, he said, adding that a rapid assessment of the situation is being conducted and at least $15 million is required immediately - a figure that will likely rise in coming days.

(Reuters)